The most basic function of the bot is the proxy function, which is demonstrated below: Above, I registered a new tupper and then sent the message >Hello! which was detected, deleted, and replaced with a message that appears to be sent by my newly registered tupper. However, there is a slight learning curve in using the bot, but getting started is very easy. How Like any bot, the help command is the best way to learn how to use it, and can be executed by typing tul!help. It comes with many moderator tools to prevent abuse as well as an active support community in our support server, you can register as many tuppers as you want, and organize them with groups, individual tags and descriptions, and other fun details. It is successful in these communities because they benefit greatly from being able to send messages under various different ‘identities’ on the fly, whether that’s to represent another person speaking with the account or a character’s line of dialogue in a roleplay.
Why Tupperbox has found great success in several communities that benefit greatly from these pseudo-accounts, such as tulpamancers, plural communities, and roleplay servers.
By default these ‘pseudo-accounts’ that each have a name and avatar are named tuppers, but you can easily rename them to your liking. This is accomplished through Discord Webhooks and is highly configurable, you set a pattern for the bot to detect in your messages and when detected, the bot replaces your message with one under the matching name and avatar (and the minor caveat of a BOT tag next to the name). What Tupperbox allows you the convenience of having multiple accounts with different names and avatars without any of the hassle of logging out and in to each of them.