Does Guilded Support Custom Server Events And Calendars?

2025-08-31 13:13:16 314

3 Answers

Zofia
Zofia
2025-09-01 19:00:38
I've been using Guilded calendars for a while and, yes, they support custom server events pretty well. You can create events with full details — title, time, timezone, recurrence, location or voice link, and a description field for agenda or prep notes. The RSVP system is simple and effective: members can mark if they’re attending, which helps with planning and role assignments. I also like that you can run multiple calendars inside a server so different teams or activities don’t mix (for example, one calendar for casual game nights and another for competitive scrims).

From my experience, permission controls let you limit who can create or edit events, which keeps things tidy. Events can be tied to channels or have threads for discussion so last-minute changes are easier to communicate without spamming the whole server. If you want external syncing, Guilded supports iCal export/import and some integrations that let you mirror events into other calendar apps. Overall it’s a solid tool for groups — especially if you care about reminders and keeping RSVPs organized.
Una
Una
2025-09-03 10:31:07
I often run a small community group and rely on Guilded’s calendars to keep us organized. From what I use regularly, you can create custom events with detailed fields — like custom tags, descriptions, repetition (daily/weekly/monthly), and attendee limits. The RSVP tracking and attendance list help me quickly see who’s committed; I’ll usually export an attendee list when we need to assign roles or shifts for an event.

Permissions are something I pay attention to: you can restrict event creation and editing to certain roles so volunteers don’t accidentally overwrite an organizer’s event, and you can create separate calendars for sub-teams so everyone only sees the schedules relevant to them. Notifications and reminders are configurable, which cuts down on no-shows. There’s also basic calendar sync/export options (iCal) so you can pull events into Google Calendar or other apps if your members prefer viewing everything in one place.

A practical tip from my side: set up templates for recurring events like weekly meetings or practice sessions, and use the event description to link to sign-up forms or prep checklists. It’s saved me time and reduced the back-and-forth messages a lot, and it feels way more professional than juggling posts in chat.
Felix
Felix
2025-09-06 09:10:46
Guilded absolutely has built-in support for custom server events and calendars, and I use it all the time for scheduling group stuff. I usually set up a calendar for our raid nights (we play 'World of Warcraft' and a handful of other games), and creating an event is super flexible: title, description, start/end times, timezone, recurrence, and a handy RSVP system so people can mark 'Going', 'Maybe', or 'Can't make it'. I also add notes like loot rules or links to prep docs right in the event description — it's saved me so many awkward DMs trying to coordinate everyone.

One feature I love is the ability to run multiple calendars in the same server: you can have a general events calendar, a tabletop calendar for our 'Dungeons & Dragons' sessions, and a competitive team calendar for scrims. Permissions are reasonable too — you can control who can create or edit events so your calendar doesn't become chaos. Reminders are sent via the app and email if people have them enabled, and events can be tied into channels or have a discussion thread attached, which is perfect for last-minute changes.

If you're trying to keep a community organized, also look into syncing/exporting via iCal or linking with external calendars where supported, and consider event templates for recurring things. For me it's replaced juggling invites across platforms — everything lands in one place and people actually show up.
View All Answers
Scan code to download App

Related Books

Support System
Support System
Jadie is the only daughter of the Beta family. The youngest of three, Jadie feels out of place in her home. When she decides to move across country to find herself, the last thing she expected to happen was for her to not only run into her mate, but to be rejected by him too. With a clouded vision of her future, the only way Jadie can be pulled out of her gloomy state is to befriend his best friend and Alpha, Lincoln. With Lincoln’s help, Jadie adventures to find her new version of normal and fulfill the true reason she moved to Michigan. Along the way, secrets of Lincoln’s are revealed that make her realize they are a lot closer than she ever thought.
Not enough ratings
28 Chapters
Ninety-Nine Times Does It
Ninety-Nine Times Does It
My sister abruptly returns to the country on the day of my wedding. My parents, brother, and fiancé abandon me to pick her up at the airport. She shares a photo of them on her social media, bragging about how she's so loved. Meanwhile, all the calls I make are rejected. My fiancé is the only one who answers, but all he tells me is not to kick up a fuss. We can always have our wedding some other day. They turn me into a laughingstock on the day I've looked forward to all my life. Everyone points at me and laughs in my face. I calmly deal with everything before writing a new number in my journal—99. This is their 99th time disappointing me; I won't wish for them to love me anymore. I fill in a request to study abroad and pack my luggage. They think I've learned to be obedient, but I'm actually about to leave forever.
9 Chapters
The Professor Wants Me and So Does My Bestfriend
The Professor Wants Me and So Does My Bestfriend
After years as inseparable friends, Sage and Kaiden have always known they could count on each other until hidden feelings start to bubble up. Kaiden, a beta, has secretly loved Sage, who is also a beta, since their school days. But with Sage eyeing someone new, Kaiden offers to help his friend pursue this new love interest. However, Kaiden’s “help” might not be as innocent as it seems, as it brings them closer than ever and unveils a possessive streak in Kaiden that neither expected.
9.5
287 Chapters
The One who does Not Understand Isekai
The One who does Not Understand Isekai
Evy was a simple-minded girl. If there's work she's there. Evy is a known workaholic. She works day and night, dedicating each of her waking hours to her jobs and making sure that she reaches the deadline. On the day of her birthday, her body gave up and she died alone from exhaustion. Upon receiving the chance of a new life, she was reincarnated as the daughter of the Duke of Polvaros and acquired the prose of living a comfortable life ahead of her. Only she doesn't want that. She wants to work. Even if it's being a maid, a hired killer, or an adventurer. She will do it. The only thing wrong with Evy is that she has no concept of reincarnation or being isekaid. In her head, she was kidnapped to a faraway land… stranded in a place far away from Japan. So she has to learn things as she goes with as little knowledge as anyone else. Having no sense of ever knowing that she was living in fantasy nor knowing the destruction that lies ahead in the future. Evy will do her best to live the life she wanted and surprise a couple of people on the way. Unbeknownst to her, all her actions will make a ripple. Whether they be for the better or worse.... Evy has no clue.
10
23 Chapters
Love Like Falling Petals
Love Like Falling Petals
During the five years that Sophie Lord was married, she had been continuously doing IVFs and was finally able to become pregnant with Luke Shaw’s child. That same day, she saw Luke at the hospital with his secretary, Helen Jones. He was accompanying her for a pregnancy test. Sophie was devastated and asked Luke to choose between her and the child in Helen’s womb. “Let’s not make a fuss, Sophie. I’ll explain everything to you when I get back. You need to calm down first. I’m keeping this child no matter what.” He carefully supported Helen as they left, but what he didn’t see was the blood trickling down Sophie’s legs. Later on, when Sophie disappeared from Luke’s life, the latter brought down completely.
28 Chapters
I Wouldn't Choose You, Either
I Wouldn't Choose You, Either
I went alone to my favorite singer’s concert. During the song selection segment, I was really excited and hoped that I would be lucky enough to be picked. But in the next second, I saw my husband, who was supposed to be on a business trip, appear on the screen. Next to him was Mia Louise, his first love. “I’d like to pick Back To The Past. I want to go back three years when I hadn’t broken up with Mia.” The entire stadium cheered and celebrated their love. I was the only one in tears. During the next song selection segment, I saw my teary face show up on the screen. “I’d like to pick Back To The Past as well. I want to return to the time when I never said yes to Samuel Gardner’s proposal.”
10 Chapters

Related Questions

How Much Does Guilded Cost For Premium Features?

3 Answers2025-08-31 02:45:01
I get excited talking about this because I used Guilded for a while with friends and explored the paid options—so here’s the practical scoop from my day-to-day use. As of the latest period I checked, Guilded offers a paid tier commonly called 'Pro' (sometimes shown as Guilded Pro or Premium in the app). The usual street price people see is around $4.99 per month, and there’s often an annual plan that works out cheaper (typically in the ballpark of $39–$50 per year). That annual discount is the big draw if you plan to stick with it. What you get with the paid plan is generally stuff that matters to creators and active communities: higher upload limits, nicer streaming/recording options, some custom personalization like themes or profile perks, and priority support. There are also server-level perks or boost-like mechanics that can unlock extra features for a whole server when multiple members contribute. Prices and exact perks do change from time to time, and sometimes there are promos or bundle deals, so I check the in-app subscription screen or Guilded’s official help pages before committing. If you’re trying to decide, think about how much you upload, whether you host streams or events, and if your server needs the extra customization—those are the things that make Pro worth it. Also note that app-store purchases (iOS/Android) might show slightly different regional pricing. I usually sign up for a month to test, then switch to annual if I’m happy with it.

Where Can I Find Tutorials For Guilded Server Setup?

3 Answers2025-08-31 11:10:02
If you're trying to get a Guilded server up and running, my favorite first stop is the official docs and Help Center — they walk you through the basics like creating teams, channels, roles, and the difference between Forums, Chats, and Pages. I often open the Help Center on one screen and my server on the other, clicking through the UI as I read; that hands-on approach saved me so much guesswork when I set up a study-group server last semester. Beyond the official docs, YouTube is gold. Search for 'Guilded server setup' or 'Guilded tutorial for beginners' and filter by recent videos — the platform changes, so newer uploads are more likely to reflect current UI options like Events and Tournament brackets. I usually watch a 10–15 minute walkthrough to get the layout, then follow up with a niche deep-dive (like voice server options, role permissions, or embedding Twitch). I once found a creator who did a series on integrating bots and webhooks and it answered a lot of quirky setup questions I hadn’t even thought to ask. If you prefer community help, r/Guilded and the official Guilded community servers are surprisingly helpful. People share templates, bot configs, and screenshots there, which makes it easy to copy a layout you like. For bots and custom automations, GitHub repos and developers’ docs are where I go — search for 'Guilded API' or check GitHub for popular bot projects. And if you want a shortcut, try importing a template or cloning a small public server; it gives you a working skeleton to tweak instead of starting from zero.

How Does Guilded Improve Team Voice Chat Quality?

3 Answers2025-08-31 09:00:21
Switching my whole raid group over to Guilded felt like swapping out a noisy old radio for a stereo system that actually knows what to do with bass and treble. For me it's not magic—it's a mix of smarter routing, modern codecs, and practical tools that actually reduce the small annoyances that kill team focus: background hiss, echo, lag spikes, and awkward volume jumps. On the technical side, Guilded uses current voice transport methods that prioritize low latency and stable packet delivery, so spoken calls arrive quicker and with fewer gaps. It also layers in noise suppression and echo cancellation which, in real scrims, means I can hear someone chewing or running a vacuum in the background without it wrecking comms. The platform lets you tweak per-channel settings and control bitrate more granularly than some other apps I’ve tried; that gives our team a clearer, more consistent audio signature when five people are talking during clutch moments. Beyond codecs and settings, Guilded pays attention to features that change day-to-day usability. Push-to-talk is solid, automatic gain control evens out voices so that quiet teammates don’t disappear and loud ones don’t blow out everyone’s ears, and the UI makes switching channels for strat-talk vs casual chat seamless. I also love that screen sharing and streaming keep latency low, so callers don’t suffer the usual reverb when someone hops into spectator mode. It’s those small, practical improvements that make coordinating during a raid or match feel less like herding cats and more like commanding a polished squad.

What Esports Teams Use Guilded For Organization?

3 Answers2025-08-31 20:49:59
When I'm organizing our little semi-pro squad, 'Guilded' has been my go-to for scheduling scrims and keeping everybody on the same page. I can’t list every org using it because teams swap tools like socks, but from what I see in community channels and scrim lobbies, a ton of collegiate programs, amateur orgs, and a fair number of contender-level teams across 'Valorant' and 'Overwatch' use it. It’s especially common among teams that want tighter roster management than what a generic Discord server provides—features like advanced calendars, roles per-team, built-in event RSVPs, and private match lobbies are huge draws. I’ve personally seen coaches and managers from smaller pro orgs share 'Guilded' links on Twitter and in Discord match channels. Pro-level organizations sometimes prefer bespoke systems or enterprise platforms, but smaller signed rosters and academy teams often gravitate toward 'Guilded' because it’s lightweight and focused on competitive needs: scrim scheduling, stat channels, and document sharing for VOD notes. Also, esports clubs at universities tend to standardize on it since it’s free and easy to manage multiple subteams. If you want names that are actively using it, your best bet is to look at public 'Guilded' teams via the app’s Discover feature, check the social bios of the teams you follow (they’ll often post a 'Join our team on Guilded' link), or watch scrim lobbies on streaming platforms where coaches drop links in the chat. I do this between morning coffee and late-night patch notes, and it usually turns up the teams I’m curious about.

How Does Guilded Compare To Discord For Streamers?

3 Answers2025-08-31 01:27:01
I've been juggling both platforms for a while now, and honestly they feel like cousins with different personalities. Guilded is the tidy, planner cousin — the place where calendars, tournament brackets, and role-specific subchannels actually live and feel useful. I use it when I'm scheduling scrims, assigning practice times, or running a small competitive group: the event and calendar tools are built-in and actually make it painless. The voice and video are solid for team calls, and the ability to make more structured, forum-like channels means less chaos when people want to talk strategy versus meme about last night's stream. Discord, though, is the party hub. If I'm streaming and want a huge chunk of my viewers to pop into voice, hang out, or get notifications, Discord wins by sheer reach. The integration ecosystem is massive — bots, overlays, StreamElements and other tools all expect Discord first, and that means I can glue my stream alerts, chat, and moderation together quickly. For public streams and larger community engagement, people already have Discord installed, which lowers friction big time. Practical tip from my own mixes: use them together rather than pick one. Host your public fanbase on Discord for discoverability and casual interaction, but set up a Guilded team for tight-knit groups, co-streamers, or competitive scheduling. It keeps things clean on both sides and saves my sanity when coordinating partners or tournaments.

What Moderation Tools Does Guilded Offer Server Admins?

3 Answers2025-08-31 03:53:37
Setting up moderation on Guilded taught me to think like both a safety officer and a party host — you want clear rules, but you also want the vibes to stay fun. The big building blocks are roles and permissions: you can create finely tuned roles that control who can send messages, manage channels, kick/ban members, or edit server settings. Channel-specific overrides are a lifesaver when you want mods to have power in a reports channel but not be able to post in a general hangout. I spent a weekend reorganizing role hierarchy to make sure junior moderators couldn’t accidentally remove senior settings. Beyond roles, Guilded gives the usual manual moderation actions — kicking, banning, and muting — and it keeps logs so you can track who did what. I lean on the moderation log constantly: it’s where you see deleted messages, bans, and permission changes. Automated tools are great too: keyword filters, profanity and link blocking, and anti-spam measures that stop raids before they snowball. I set up a few custom filters for invite links and obvious scams, and that cut down the noise dramatically. Finally, don’t forget integrations. Bots and webhooks extend Guilded’s native tools — you can add warn systems, timed mutes/bans, and more sophisticated automod rules. My practical tip: document your moderation flows (how to escalate, when to temp-ban vs. warn) in a private mod channel, and schedule periodic audits of filters so you don’t accidentally lock out legitimate chat during events. It keeps the server healthy, and it makes moderation less of a guessing game.

Can Guilded Integrate With Twitch And YouTube Channels?

3 Answers2025-08-31 14:29:16
Yes — Guilded absolutely supports integrations with Twitch and YouTube, and I've been messing with them for a while so I've seen the nice bits and the odd quirks. In my experience the core flow is simple: you connect your Twitch and/or YouTube account from your Team/Server settings (look for Connections or Integrations), authorize Guilded, then pick which channel you want stream and upload notifications to appear in. That gets you basic live alerts and the little embedded player for live streams so people can watch without leaving Guilded. Beyond the basic notifications, Twitch tends to have deeper, more useful hooks: you can set up subscriber-role syncing so people who subscribe on Twitch automatically get a role in your Guilded space (handy for subscriber-only channels or perks). YouTube will reliably fire live and upload notifications too, but membership sync may be more limited depending on how Guilded exposes YouTube's API — in practice I often supplement YouTube with webhooks or a third-party service to get the same level of role automation. If you want totally custom behavior, you can use bots or webhook integrations (or Zapier) to post tailored messages, create highlight posts when a stream ends, or auto-create events. A couple of practical tips from my testing: make sure the Guilded bot or the integration has the correct permissions (manage roles if you want auto-role assignment, send messages for notifications). Test changes on a private channel before announcing because notification templates and role rules can surprise you. Also explore Guilded's Events/Live Channels features — scheduling a stream as an event creates RSVPs and reminders that feel nicer than raw webhook pings. Overall it’s a solid setup for streamers and communities; I usually connect both, use Twitch for subscriber perks, and use extra webhooks for richer YouTube handling when I need it.

How Secure Is Guilded For Private Gaming Communities?

3 Answers2025-08-31 06:15:32
I still get a little excited talking about this because Guilded feels like a modern clubhouse for gamers — and like any clubhouse, how safe it is depends on how you lock the doors. From my experience poking around Guilded and running private groups there, it offers the basic and some advanced controls you’d want: two-factor authentication for accounts, role-based permissions for channels and features, invite links that you can manage, and audit logs so you can see who did what. All traffic goes over normal web encryption (HTTPS/TLS), so casual eavesdropping on a café Wi‑Fi isn’t something I’d worry about. That said, it doesn’t magically make a community airtight. Guilded doesn’t advertise end-to-end encryption for server chats or voice, so anything super-sensitive shouldn’t be shared there as if it were a sealed letter. The bigger risks I’ve seen come from human factors: weak passwords, reused logins, poorly vetted bots with overbroad permissions, and invite links pasted into public places. For a private gaming clan that just wants to coordinate raids and share media, the default setup is usually fine if you turn on 2FA and lock down invite settings. If I’m being practical, I treat Guilded as “secure enough” for casual to semi-competitive use but not for handling legal documents or secret IP. My checklist: enforce 2FA, use role separation (admins vs officers vs members), set invite expirations, review bot scopes, and educate new members about phishing. For anything more sensitive, I’d slip into encrypted DMs or use a dedicated service. Overall, it’s friendly and reasonably secure — just remember the doors are only as strong as the keys you hand out.
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status