Chat Revival Bot

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Revision as of 23:41, 27 September 2025 by Emily (talk | contribs) (linkify)
An anime girl annoyed at the ping symbol with a red deepfried overlay.
Profile picture of the Chat Revival Bot before it got deleted

Chat Revival Bot (commonly shortened to CRB) is now a deleted bot developed by Jsaidoru with the intention of reviving the chat with a randomly picked question from a list. The bot was made to be an adaptation of the ?revive custom command made by Silvy on Dyno, except with much more questions due to unlimited character space. Aside from a revive command, the bot also had a built-in economy with the KEKW and skull emojis, where the method of obtaining it would be reactions. The bot got deleted after a series of controversial bans on Jsaidoru sending NSFW videos to two members with consent. It had the > prefix.

The bot was written in Python and you can still see the source here: https://github.com/jsaidoru/chat-revive-bot.

Commands

Chat Revive (>revive)

Chat Revival, as denoted by the bot name, is the main purpose of the bot. Upon triggering the command, the bot would choose a random question from a list of 400+ of them, and would ping the Chat Revival Ping role unless specified otherwise. The bot does have some subcommands:

  • withping: Includes the Chat Revival ping (ping is included by default so this subcommand is unnecessary)
  • withoutping: Removes the Chat Revival ping and only shows the question
  • manual <text>: Does the chat revive command including the ping but including your own question

Throughout its inclusion, the command gathered criticism from the other members over the questions supposed poor quality and repetitiveness, while Jsaidoru argued that he could only come up with so many questions and that they were going through his questions too quickly. The criticism stayed however, mainly with Kan, even after members like NotBaltic added 200+ new questions to the list. As a result from this kerfuffle, on some versions of the bot, if they used the command too much, the bot would refuse to pick another question, and in other versions, he implemented a 10 minute cooldown.

KEKW Economy (>kekwlb)

The KEKW Economy and the Skull Economy were a highly requested feature from the Chess Rock Community members, but it was never finished due to the controversial bans on Jsaidoru. The main method of obtaining KEKW and Skulls (the currencies) was reactions from other members, although later Jsaidoru would implement a >work command that worked similarly to Unbelievaboat's work command with mixed reception. The KEKW Economy commands included:

  • bal [member]: Checks the KEKW and Skull balance of yourself (or a specified member)
  • kekwlb: Checks the top 10 people with the most KEKWs
  • work: Gives a random amount of KEKWs or Skulls when you use it.

When the bot got deleted, Blunderer ended up with the most KEKWs.