

Or if you’d like to break it down in a color-coordinated way, i’m pulling a screenshot from part 2 of my tupperbox tutorial! the purple shows that the image will be your avatar, the blue is your tupper id & what your muse’s display name will be by default (within the quotations), and the green will be what you type before every message you’d like to appear as your tupper. Here’s a little gif if you would want to include it in your servers too: this is what my tutorials usually look like: If you want to make this easy for everyone, i recommend setting up a little tutorial for your pinned messages. put it near the top of your channels because your members will want to access it easily ! this is where everyone can register tuppers / test them / change icons. I always start by setting up a channel called #tupperbox in my servers. it will ask you to sign in with discord, authorize some permissions, and choose a server to place it in. see it in action below!Ĭlick on the source link below and select ‘add to server’. Tupperbox is a discord proxy bot that allows for much more immersive experiences in ic groupchats. (no credit required, but it’s always nice!) you’re free to pull any screenshots from this tutorial for demonstration purposes in your own server. Note: the link to invite tupperbox can be found in the source below. i’ll dive into what tupperbox is, how to add it to your server, and how to implement it among your members. 1) ♡ hello ! in this post, i’ll be explaining how to use tupperbox from an admin viewpoint.
