Your Discord Friends, In Your Game
Your Discord friends and your in-game friends are usually the same people, but those two worlds don’t always connect. You can see a friend is playing something on Discord, but there’s no direct line from the conversation into the game. You’re in-game and you can’t easily pull in the friend who’s sitting right there in your voice channel on Discord.
That's the gap Account Linking helps close.
Last year, we launched the Social SDK to let you bring Discord's social layer directly into your game and connect a player’s Discord account to their in-game account. When those accounts are linked, social presence becomes persistent. With activity sharing turned on, players’ friends can see what they’re playing. Jumping into a game doesn't start with a text message. The coordination cost drops low enough that playing together starts to just happen.
I saw this while playing Battlefield 6 recently. Friends were online, I could see who was playing on Discord, and jumping into a match together just worked. No planning, no pasting codes. That's what it should feel like.
When it's easier to play together, people play more. Across our initial integration partners, that's showing up clearly: linked players show a median 25% increase in active game days and 16% longer session duration.6
Our partners range from Marvel Rivals by NetEase to Rust by Facepunch, Pax Dei by Mainframe Industries, Delta Force and Arena Breakout by Tencent, and Predecessor by Omeda Studios. Different genres, different scales, multiple platforms. Same pattern: linked players show up more often and stay longer.
Since launching, we've continued investing in the SDK based on what we're hearing from partners and what they hear from players. In addition to bringing Discord's cross-platform communication features fully out of beta and rounds of performance improvements, here's what's new:
- Smarter, simpler Account Linking. Players can now link accounts from within Discord itself, with prompts that show up contextually, like when friends are playing a linked game. For studios with multiple titles, publisher authentication can handle linking across all of them. And mobile linking is now fully native on iOS and Android.
- Richer in-game communication. With their account linked, persistent message history helps keep players caught up between sessions. Players can also enjoy richer, more immersive audio experiences now that developers can take full advantage of audio tools to handle post-processing effects. Moderation workflows are now enabled with server-side APIs, letting developers leverage their preferred moderation services to protect in-game conversations.
- Refined Rich Presence. Custom display names, buttons, and new activity types like "listening," "watching," and "competing" mean your status on Discord actually shows what you're doing in a game, not just that you're playing it. As a developer, you can customize exactly how the game appears in Discord.