How to Use the CommunityOne Twitter/X to Discord Bot (Social Channels, Routing & Track Rewards)

Summary

Connect CommunityOne’s Twitter/X bot to Discord, route tweets to the right channels, and enable track rewards for replies and retweets.

To use CommunityOne’s Twitter/X integration in Discord, you’ll connect your Twitter/X account, set up where tweets show up, and configure track rewards so engagement can be turned into points. This guide walks through the same setup flow covered in the video.

Discord socials channel setup for Twitter/X tweets

CommunityOne’s bot consolidates tweets into Discord under a dedicated channel—commonly a “socials” channel.

In this setup:
- Tweets that mention your community or come from your official accounts are posted into Discord in one place.
- You choose the Discord channel where the bot will deliver those posts.

The “socials” channel is the central destination for the feed, which makes it easy to monitor Twitter/X activity without leaving Discord.

Routing tweets to separate channels (official vs community mentions)

After you connect the feed, the bot can route tweets to different Discord channels based on the tweet source or category.

The video highlights two main routing categories:
- Tweets from official accounts
- Tweets from community members (including mentions)

This lets you split communication in Discord so official updates and community participation don’t need to live in the same stream.

How tweet content display works in Discord (link-only vs expanded)

The interface can control how much of each tweet appears in Discord.

Depending on what’s available, tweet content may be shown as:
- Link-only content, or
- Expanded tweet content (when more text is included)

By adjusting this display behavior, you can decide how much context users see directly in Discord versus clicking through.

Track reward feature: points for replies/retweets and claiming rewards

Once the Twitter/X feed is flowing into Discord, the next step is enabling CommunityOne’s track reward feature.

The track reward concept covered in the video includes:
- Tracking engagement actions tied to specific tweets
- Awarding points for actions such as replying and retweeting
- Allowing users to claim rewards after they complete the required action

This setup is intended to turn participation into measurable outcomes rather than purely passive viewing of social posts.

Reward rules configuration and optional tweet expiration

Track rewards are configured through reward rules. In the video, the key idea is that you decide which user actions should earn points and which rule or row those actions belong to.

The transcript also includes guidance on specific rule design choices, such as:
- Rewarding at-mentions/notification-style interactions when official accounts tweet infrequently
- Targeting a specific “Twitter notification ping” rule

Additionally, you can optionally set an expiration date for rewarded tweets. This means reward eligibility can be time-bounded, so points are tied to a defined window of social engagement.

Connect Twitter/X in the dashboard (Hype Engine socials tab)

To set everything up, you do it from CommunityOne’s dashboard.

The video’s setup flow includes:
- Open the dashboard
- Go to the Hype Engine “socials” tab
- Connect your Twitter/X account
- Choose the correct main feed and your official accounts

After this connection step, the bot can begin posting the Twitter/X feed into your configured Discord socials channel(s).

Community feed settings and tweet pull frequency (free vs premium)

Beyond track rewards, the video explains enabling a community feed to support a creator-style program.

The goal of the community feed is to drive “natural rewards” by encouraging:
- Other fellow community members following participants
- Those same community members interacting with participants

To configure this, you enable the community feed and set:
- The community feed channels
- Actions and notifications
- How long tweets take to expire

The transcript also calls out how frequently tweets are pulled:
- On free accounts, tweets are pulled roughly every five minutes
- On premium accounts, tweets are pulled faster

This pull frequency can impact how quickly Discord reflects new Twitter/X activity, which matters for time-sensitive rewards and participation.

Conclusion

Using CommunityOne’s Twitter/X Discord bot is a two-part setup: first, connect and route your Twitter/X feed into your Discord “socials” channels with the content display behavior you want. Then, enable the track reward feature and configure reward rules for actions like replies and retweets (optionally setting an expiration window). Finally, turn on the community feed settings so engagement from other community members can generate the most natural rewards.