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DiscordBotClient 3.9.1, published by aiko-chan-ai, is an open-source desktop wrapper that patches the official Discord client so it can accept bot tokens instead of user credentials, effectively turning the familiar chat interface into a control panel for automated Discord accounts. The software ships with Vencord pre-injected, giving operators access to more than two hundred additional plug-ins—ranging from message logger and slash-command utilities to advanced CSS theming—while still receiving the underlying Electron updates that keep the program in sync with Discord’s evolving API. Typical use cases include developers who want to test bot commands visually, server moderators who need to monitor large communities without running separate dashboard software, and content creators who automate welcome messages, role menus, or music playback directly from the same window they use for personal chat. Because the program appears to Discord’s servers as a normal bot, it respects rate limits and permission hierarchies, yet it renders guilds, channels, and DMs in real time, making debugging or live event management more intuitive than console-based alternatives. Eleven numbered releases have appeared since the project launched, each aligning with a corresponding Discord stable build and incrementally adding support for newer features such as forum channels, activities, and soundboard playback. The entire codebase is published under the MIT license on GitHub, allowing advanced users to fork, audit, or compile custom variants, while casual adopters can grab a ready-to-run Windows executable that updates itself through built-in pull mechanisms. DiscordBotClient is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always delivering the latest version and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.
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