Streamer / Content Creator Server
Subscriber tiers, sub-only channels, live alerts via Twitch bot, clip submissions, mod team coordination.
A streamer Discord is a fan home base, not a gaming server with a stream attached. The structure has to do three jobs: tell viewers when you're live (so they show up), reward subscribers in a way that's visible (so subs feel valued and free viewers feel an upgrade path), and give mods a workspace that doesn't leak into public channels. This template handles all three. Live alerts auto-post via your Twitch/YouTube integration. Subscriber-only channels gate access to the @subscriber role linked from the platform. Mod chat sits in a private category with a reports channel that's actually moderated.
Channel structure
- 📢
announcements - #
live-alerts— Auto-posted by Twitch/YouTube bot - #
schedule— Pinned weekly schedule
- #
general - #
clips— Members submit highlights - #
fan-art - #
memes
- #
subs-chat— @subscriber role only - 🔊
subs-vc
- 🔊
Stream Watch Party - 🔊
General VC
- #
mod-chat - #
reports
Role structure
@streamer— You@mod— Discord + chat mods@editor— Video editor / clipper@subscriber— Linked Twitch sub or YouTube member@vip— Top supporters / regulars@viewer— EveryoneRules starter
- Be kind. No harassment of other viewers, the streamer, or anyone.
- No backseat moderating.
- Spoilers go in spoiler tags.
- Self-promo only in the designated channel (or with mod approval).
- Respect the subscriber-only spaces.
When to use this template
Use this template if you're an active creator (regular streams or weekly uploads) with at least a few hundred dedicated viewers. If your stream is mostly for friends and you don't have public viewers, the Friend Group or Gaming template is closer fit. If you're a multi-creator collective or studio, you'll want the Community template with creator-tier roles bolted on. If you're sub-100 viewers, this template still works — just don't expect the sub-only channels to feel populated until your audience grows.
Common mistakes when setting this up
The biggest mistake is making subscriber benefits invisible. If subs see the same channels as free viewers, the linked Twitch sub feels pointless and your conversion drops. Make the @subscriber role visible (custom color), give them at least one channel that's actually used, and shout out new subs in #announcements. Other failure modes: clip channels with no curation rule (you'll get spammed with full streams instead of highlights — set a 60-second max), and live-alert channels that aren't pinned (viewers miss the alert and miss the stream). Also: turn on slow mode in #general during streams or it becomes a wall of "wassup chat" spam that drowns real conversation.
Build this template in 30 seconds
Describe your server in plain English and VibeBot creates every channel, role, and permission for you. The streamer / content creator server structure above takes ~30 seconds to spin up.
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