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Mcp Discord Raw
What is Mcp Discord Raw
mcp-discord-raw is an MCP server designed for Discord bots, providing raw API access through a flexible tool that supports both REST API calls and slash command syntax.
Use cases
Use cases for mcp-discord-raw include automating server management tasks, creating custom Discord bots that interact with users, and integrating Discord functionalities into applications.
How to use
To use mcp-discord-raw, install it via Smithery or manually by setting up a Discord bot, cloning the repository, and configuring it in your ‘claude_desktop_config.json’. You can then make API calls using either REST API style or slash command style.
Key features
Key features include raw access to the Discord API, support for both REST and slash command styles, and the ability to perform various actions such as creating roles, sending messages, and retrieving server information.
Where to use
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Clients Supporting MCP
The following are the main client software that supports the Model Context Protocol. Click the link to visit the official website for more information.
Overview
What is Mcp Discord Raw
mcp-discord-raw is an MCP server designed for Discord bots, providing raw API access through a flexible tool that supports both REST API calls and slash command syntax.
Use cases
Use cases for mcp-discord-raw include automating server management tasks, creating custom Discord bots that interact with users, and integrating Discord functionalities into applications.
How to use
To use mcp-discord-raw, install it via Smithery or manually by setting up a Discord bot, cloning the repository, and configuring it in your ‘claude_desktop_config.json’. You can then make API calls using either REST API style or slash command style.
Key features
Key features include raw access to the Discord API, support for both REST and slash command styles, and the ability to perform various actions such as creating roles, sending messages, and retrieving server information.
Where to use
undefined
Clients Supporting MCP
The following are the main client software that supports the Model Context Protocol. Click the link to visit the official website for more information.
Content
Discord Raw API MCP Server
This MCP server provides raw Discord API access through a single flexible tool. It supports both REST API calls and slash command syntax.
Installation
Installing via Smithery
To install Discord Raw API for Claude Desktop automatically via Smithery:
npx -y @smithery/cli install @hanweg/mcp-discord-raw --client claude
Manual Installation
-
Set up your Discord bot:
- Create a new application at Discord Developer Portal
- Create a bot and copy the token
- Enable required privileged intents:
- MESSAGE CONTENT INTENT
- PRESENCE INTENT
- SERVER MEMBERS INTENT
- Invite the bot to your server using OAuth2 URL Generator
-
Clone and install the package:
# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/hanweg/mcp-discord-raw.git
cd mcp-discord-raw
# Create and activate virtual environment
uv venv
.venv\Scripts\activate
### If using Python 3.13+ - install audioop library: `uv pip install audioop-lts`
# Install the package
uv pip install -e .
Configuration
Add this to your claude_desktop_config.json
Usage
REST API Style
{
"method": "POST",
"endpoint": "guilds/123456789/roles",
"payload": {
"name": "Bot Master",
"permissions": "8",
"color": 3447003,
"mentionable": true
}
}
Slash Command Style
{
"method": "POST",
"endpoint": "/role create name:Bot_Master color:blue permissions:8 mentionable:true guild_id:123456789"
}
Examples
- Create a role:
{
"method": "POST",
"endpoint": "/role create name:Moderator color:red permissions:moderate_members guild_id:123456789"
}
- Send a message:
{
"method": "POST",
"endpoint": "channels/123456789/messages",
"payload": {
"content": "Hello from the API!"
}
}
- Get server information:
{
"method": "GET",
"endpoint": "guilds/123456789"
}
Recommendations:
Put server, channel and user IDs and some examples in project knowledge to avoid having to remind the model of those, along with something like this to get it started:
"Here’s how to effectively use the Discord raw API tool:
The tool is called discord_api and takes three parameters:
- method: HTTP method (“GET”, “POST”, “PUT”, “PATCH”, “DELETE”)
- endpoint: Discord API endpoint (e.g., “guilds/{guild.id}/roles”)
- payload: Optional JSON object for the request body
Key examples I’ve used: - Creating roles:
discord_api method: POST endpoint: guilds/{server_id}/roles payload: { "name": "Role Name", "color": 3447003, // Blue color in decimal "mentionable": true }
- Creating categories and channels:
// Category discord_api method: POST endpoint: guilds/{server_id}/channels payload: { "name": "Category Name", "type": 4 // 4 = category } // Text channel in category discord_api method: POST endpoint: guilds/{server_id}/channels payload: { "name": "channel-name", "type": 0, // 0 = text channel "parent_id": "category_id", "topic": "Channel description" }
- Moving channels to categories:
discord_api method: PATCH endpoint: channels/{channel_id} payload: { "parent_id": "category_id" }
- Sending messages:
discord_api method: POST endpoint: channels/{channel_id}/messages payload: { "content": "Message text with emojis \ud83d\ude04" }
- Assigning roles:
discord_api method: PUT endpoint: guilds/{server_id}/members/{user_id}/roles/{role_id} payload: {}
The tool supports the full Discord API, so you can reference the Discord API documentation for more endpoints and features. The responses include IDs and other metadata you can use for subsequent requests.
Pro tips:
- Save IDs returned from creation requests to use in follow-up requests
Unicode emojis can be included directly in message content? Tell the model to use discord emoji like :champagne_glass: - Messages with unicode emoji hangs Claude Desktop?- Channel types: 0 = text, 2 = voice, 4 = category, 13 = stage
- Role colors are in decimal format (not hex)
- Most modification endpoints use PATCH method
- Empty payloads should be {} not null"
License
MIT License
Dev Tools Supporting MCP
The following are the main code editors that support the Model Context Protocol. Click the link to visit the official website for more information.










