Command options
Collect users, channels, text, numbers, or choices from a command.
FromFlow Get Started Discord slash command bot
FromFlow helps you create slash command workflows for support, moderation, utilities, roles, data, embeds, and server tools without writing or deploying Discord.js code.
Build the workflow
Slash commands are the cleanest way for members and staff to trigger bot behavior. FromFlow turns each command into a visual workflow with options, conditions, actions, and responses.
Collect users, channels, text, numbers, or choices from a command.
Limit staff commands by role before actions run.
Send ephemeral-style helper responses where supported by the workflow.
Create tickets, send embeds, assign roles, or update stored data.
Server use cases
Slash commands are discoverable in Discord and work well for help menus, moderation tools, rank checks, polls, giveaways, profile commands, and support flows.
Show server resources, rules, or bot instructions.
Let staff warn, timeout, log, or open review flows.
Open or manage support requests from Discord.
Show colors, timestamps, profiles, ranks, or server info.
How it works
Start from a Discord event, slash command, button, menu, member join, message, or template workflow.
Add conditions, role checks, data lookups, messages, embeds, channel actions, and follow-up steps visually.
Check channels, permissions, role hierarchy, message copy, staff notifications, and edge cases before launch.
Run the bot through FromFlow hosting, then keep editing the workflow as your Discord server changes.
FAQ
A Discord slash command bot automates a specific Discord server job with triggers, conditions, messages, role actions, logs, and follow-up steps that match your community.
Yes. FromFlow lets you build a Discord slash command bot with visual workflows instead of writing Discord.js code or hosting a bot process yourself.
Yes. FromFlow workflows can connect tickets, moderation, welcome flows, roles, embeds, commands, logs, stored data, and hosted deployment in the same custom bot.
Test it in a private channel or staging server first. Check permissions, role hierarchy, message copy, staff notifications, edge cases, and logs before moving it into a live community.