Discord integration
streamion.bot can join your Discord server and run there alongside your Twitch channel. Today the Discord side powers birthday greetings for your community (see Birthdays); it's set up once and shared by everything Discord-related.
You manage it on Settings → Discord (/settings/discord), which needs the discord.manage permission — granted to the Owner and every Admin by default, and to Moderators only if you grant it on the Team page. It's free for every workspace.
Connecting a server
On the Connection tab, click Add the bot to your server. Discord opens its standard authorization screen where you pick the server to add the bot to and confirm. When you come back, the server is linked automatically.
If you'd rather link by hand — or the automatic step didn't capture it — paste your Server (Guild) ID into the field and click Link server. To find the ID: enable Developer Mode in Discord (User Settings → Advanced), then right-click your server and choose Copy Server ID.
Either way the bot needs permission to view the channel and send messages wherever it should post. One Discord server is linked per workspace.
Status and removing the bot
The Connection tab shows whether the bot is online, its latency, and a card for the linked server with its name, member count, and when it was linked. Two actions are available:
- Remove bot from server — the bot leaves the server and the link is removed. You can re-invite it anytime.
- Only remove link (bot stays) — drops the link on our side but leaves the bot in your Discord server.
Slash commands in Discord
Once the bot is in your server, your community can use its slash commands directly in Discord:
/ping— a quick health check that the bot is responding./birthday …— register and view birthdays (see Birthdays).