
Instead, we'll have bot user that sits idle on the server. I also figured that Discord's excellent engineers (and legal department) might not be too happy with some random guy on the internet distributing a hacked client. However, the downside of changing these notifications clientside is that they'll only work for people with the modified client. Speaking of its webapp, it's even easier to hack our own sound samples in there. Discord's desktop app is built with Electron, meaning it's basically a glorified webapp. My first attempt at getting this to work involved breaking open Discord's client and replacing the existing connect and disconnect notification sounds. Sorry, your browser doesn't support embedded videos. The source code and instructions on running it are available on GitHub and I highly recommend playing around with it to see what dumb ideas you come up with to annoy your quarantained friends. Introducing DisTeamCordSpeak, a Discord bot that'll play TeamSpeak's infamous notification sounds on voice chat whenever someone connects or disconnects from a channel. And even though Discord is pretty great, there's one TeamSpeak feature missing to complete the nostalgia trip: the obnoxious voice notifications.



This inevitably brought back some good memories from the Summer nights we spent playing games and chatting away on TeamSpeak. In the past few weeks my friends and I spent quite literally day and night on Discord's voice chat. Bringing TeamSpeak voice notifications to Discord
