
Channel chat
ScreenshotBuild fake Discord server chats and DMs with role colors, bot badges, and member lists. Perfect for gaming YouTubers and streamers. Export screenshots or video.
Screenshot Ideas
Preview Discord screenshot examples for design channels, quick approvals, and reaction-heavy team conversations.

Channel chat
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Reaction
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Direct message
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Standup
ScreenshotNo installs, no accounts. Just open the editor and start building.
Select Discord from 35+ supported apps and choose chat, post, or story mode.
Edit messages, avatars, timestamps, read receipts, dark mode, and every detail.
Download a pixel-perfect screenshot or an animated MP4 video with typing effects.
Stage the native cues that make a Discord chat read as real at a glance, then export it cleanly for close-up edits.
No downloads. Open the editor, pick Discord, and start building in seconds.
Export animated MP4s with typing dots and scroll, or crisp retina-ready PNGs.
Your chats never leave your browser. Zero data stored on our servers.
Every bubble, header, and icon matches the real Discord interface.
These are the interface cues viewers usually notice first when a Discord screen is on camera.
Also included
These are the scenarios where Discord chats usually feel the most natural, useful, and believable on screen.
Build believable team chatter for lobbies, raids, ranked queues, and fast in-game planning.
Stage mod notes, event callouts, and community reactions with a familiar Discord server feel.
Use Discord threads in skits, commentary videos, and community-led story scenes.
Show bot replies, role-colored names, and structured server context in demos or product concepts.
Discord scenes are judged on context before anything else. If the channel structure, username styling, role colors, or bot cues feel off, viewers notice immediately even when the message text itself is strong.
This page works best for gaming coordination, streamer-community conversations, mod announcements, and bot-style workflows. The goal is not just to mimic a dark UI, but to recreate the layered server feeling that makes Discord distinct from other chat apps.
Quick answers to common questions about workflow, realism, and export decisions.
Yes. The page supports Discord-style layouts for community-style server scenes as well as direct-message style conversations.
Yes. Those details are useful when you need a screenshot that reads as a real server instead of a generic dark chat window.
The biggest factors are channel context, username styling, role color restraint, and writing that sounds like a real community chat instead of staged dialogue.
Use PNG for memes, thumbnails, and static inserts. Use MP4 when message pacing, bot responses, or reveal order are part of the story beat.
Start with a screenshot or a video. No account needed — just open the editor and go.
Open the Discord chat editorWe support 35+ messaging and social platforms. Browse the full platform library