Alesha lives in your Discord, not just your stream
Your community is active during the ~95% of the week you're offline. Alesha bridges the two: it announces your go-lives, welcomes new members, and — on Pro — runs the same AI co-host, real-time translation, and moderation right inside Discord. One AI identity across your stream and your community.
Free
- 🔴 Auto go-live announcements (YouTube / Twitch / Kick)
- 👋 New-member welcomes
- 📊 Post-stream recap with chat-mood emoji
Pro · $12.99/mo
- 🤖 AI co-host replies (@mention)
- 🌐 Real-time translation for foreign members
- 🛡️ AI moderation (auto-delete)
- ⌨️ Slash commands: /alesha-help, /alesha-stats
How to connect (1 click)
- Open the Alesha dashboard and click Connect Discord.
- Pick your server and authorize — least-privilege permissions, never Administrator.
- Alesha joins, confirms in your channel, and announces your next go-live.
FAQ
Does Alesha work with Discord?
Yes. Alesha is the only streaming AI co-host that also runs in your Discord community. Connect your server in one click from the dashboard — no manual setup or invite links to paste.
What does Alesha do in Discord for free?
On the free plan Alesha auto-announces when you go live on YouTube, Twitch, or Kick, welcomes new members, and posts a post-stream recap with the chat's mood. No credit card required.
What does Alesha Pro add in Discord?
Pro ($12.99/mo) runs the full AI co-host inside Discord: @mention it for AI replies in the member's own language, real-time translation for foreign-language members, and AI moderation that removes toxic messages — the same Alesha identity your viewers already know, active between streams.
How do I add Alesha to my Discord server?
Open the Alesha dashboard, click Connect Discord, pick your server, and authorize. Alesha joins, confirms in your channel, and starts announcing your go-lives. There is no manual configuration.
Is it safe? What permissions does the bot need?
Alesha requests least-privilege permissions (send messages, read, embed, and manage messages for moderation) — never Administrator. It never pings @everyone or roles, even if asked, and rate-limits itself to prevent spam.