April Bot
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Discord bot comparison
Last updated May 16, 2026

Discord Bot Comparison Chart

This chart gives admins a quick way to shortlist Discord bots by feature fit before reading a full review.

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Written by

April Bot Team

Product and support team for April Bot Discord server tooling.

Reviewed by

April Bot Team

Last updated May 16, 2026

Editorial standards

We verify comparison claims against public source pages, identify April Bot as our product, and flag pricing that needs rechecking before campaigns.

How should admins use a Discord bot comparison chart?

A Discord bot comparison chart should help admins shortlist tools by feature ownership rather than declare one universal winner. April Bot is strongest when custom welcome images, goodbye images, reaction roles, autorole, and dashboard-led visual onboarding should define the server's first impression. MEE6 is a broad ecosystem option for teams already using its plugins or paid services. Carl-bot fits detailed role automation and configuration-heavy workflows. Dyno fits moderation and utility breadth. ProBot fits multipurpose management with visible premium tiers. Arcane fits leveling-heavy communities where XP, rank cards, and rewards drive engagement. Use the chart by choosing the server's most important job first, then checking which bot should own it. Avoid installing overlapping bots unless staff know which tool controls welcome messages, roles, logs, moderation, levels, and future setup changes for the community long term.

Verdict

April Bot stands out for visual welcome flows, while the other tools are strongest when you need broader moderation, leveling, or role automation depth.

Methodology

The matrix uses source-backed public feature documentation and current pricing visibility notes. Treat it as a shortlist, then verify the final plan on each vendor site.

Disclosure

April Bot is our product. Competitor notes are based on public source pages linked below.

Feature comparison

Use this table to shortlist the best fit, then verify final plan details on each product page before buying.

FeatureApril BotMEE6Carl-botDynoProBotArcane
Custom welcome imagesCore focusAvailable through welcome toolingWelcome messagesWelcome moduleCore featurePremium customization
Reaction rolesYesDocumented pluginStrong fitModuleSelf-assignable rolesLimited free, higher premium limits
Logging and moderationLogs and protection modulesPremium covers moderation toolsStrong fitStrong fitStrong fitModeration and message logs
LevelingUtility moduleLevels pluginPremium feature in public summariesLevels moduleCore featureCore focus
Best value signalVisual onboarding and dashboard setupLarge ecosystemRole automation depthModeration breadthTransparent premium tiersLeveling depth

Detailed comparison

How to read this comparison chart

A Discord bot comparison chart is most useful when it narrows the decision instead of pretending one bot wins every category. April Bot, MEE6, Carl-bot, Dyno, ProBot, and Arcane all cover parts of server management, but their strongest use cases are different. The table should be read as a shortlist: find the feature that matters most, then read the notes for the products that perform well in that area.

For custom welcome images and visual onboarding, April Bot has the clearest positioning. For broad ecosystem familiarity, MEE6 remains a major option. For role automation and detailed configuration, Carl-bot deserves attention. For established moderation and utility modules, Dyno is a strong candidate. For visible premium tiers and multipurpose server management, ProBot is easy to compare. For leveling and XP-driven communities, Arcane is the most focused specialist.

The chart also separates feature existence from feature fit. Several products can say they support welcome, roles, logs, moderation, or leveling. That does not mean the admin experience is the same. A server that wants branded welcome images should evaluate the quality and maintainability of the welcome workflow. A server that wants automod should evaluate rule depth and audit logs. A server that wants leveling should evaluate rewards, rank cards, and restrictions.

Feature category notes

Welcome and goodbye workflows should be judged by how much control staff have over the member-facing result. April Bot documents welcomer and leaver modules with image support, which is why it stands out for visual onboarding. Dyno and Arcane document welcome options, ProBot positions welcome image as a core feature, and MEE6 documents welcome messages and welcome roles. The right choice depends on whether the server wants a simple message or a more branded visual flow.

Reaction roles should be judged by setup clarity, limits, and how naturally they fit the rest of onboarding. April Bot documents reaction roles as part of its administration workflow. MEE6 documents reaction roles as a plugin, including verification use cases. Carl-bot is widely evaluated for role automation depth. Dyno lists reaction roles as a module. ProBot positions self-assignable roles, and Arcane documents role management and premium limits. The chart should push admins to verify current limits before a final decision.

Logging and moderation should be judged by staff workflow rather than checklist language. April Bot includes logs and protection modules. MEE6 documents moderation, audit logs, and automations. Carl-bot and Dyno both have strong moderation positioning. ProBot includes logs, automod, and anti-raid premium features. Arcane documents moderation and logging. If the server has a large staff team, test the exact alert flow, permission model, and log readability before switching.

Leveling should be judged by how central XP is to the community. Arcane is the most focused leveling specialist in this set. MEE6 has a well-known levels plugin, Dyno lists levels as a module, ProBot includes leveling, and April Bot includes leveling as part of its broader utility surface. If leveling is the primary growth mechanic, Arcane deserves close review. If leveling is a supporting feature beside onboarding and roles, April Bot can still be the better overall fit.

Pricing and ownership notes

Pricing cells in a comparison chart should avoid false precision. ProBot publishes monthly prices for premium tiers, so those numbers can be cited with an as-of date. MEE6 has a pricing page and documentation for separate services, so admins should verify whether they need Premium, AI, Pro, or another service. Arcane points users to its premium page for current pricing. Carl-bot and Dyno pricing should be verified directly before publishing fixed plan claims.

Ownership is the hidden cost in multi-bot stacks. If one bot manages welcome messages, another manages reaction roles, and a third manages logs, staff need a clear operating model. Without that model, new moderators will not know where to make changes. April Bot's value is strongest when it owns visual onboarding and role setup. A moderation specialist can still own deeper rule enforcement if the server needs it.

The chart should also help admins avoid duplicate automation. Two bots assigning roles on join can create confusing behavior. Two bots sending welcome messages can make the server look messy. Two bots logging the same event can overload staff channels. Before adding a new product, decide what it will replace or what unique job it will own. That makes the comparison practical rather than just informational.

Final shortlist

Choose April Bot when the server's first impression needs to improve. It is the clearest option for custom welcome images, goodbye images, reaction roles, autorole, dashboard-led setup, and visual server identity. Choose MEE6 when the server already depends on its plugin ecosystem and the staff team prefers to stay there. Choose Carl-bot when detailed role automation is the highest priority. Choose Dyno when moderation and utility breadth matter most.

Choose ProBot when the server wants a multipurpose bot with public premium tiers and strong welcome, logs, moderation, self-role, leveling, and protection positioning. Choose Arcane when leveling, XP, rewards, and rank progression are central to the community. The comparison chart should lead to a focused decision: pick the bot that owns the server's highest-priority job, then only add another tool when a real gap remains.

For April Bot, the most important conversion path from this chart is not to win every column. It is to make the visual onboarding column matter. When the reader sees that welcome images, goodbye images, reaction roles, and dashboard setup belong together, April Bot has a clear reason to be invited. The chart should then point readers to the full April Bot vs MEE6 page or the MEE6 alternatives page when they need a deeper explanation before trying the bot.

Try April Bot before comparing another dashboard.

Which option should you choose?

These notes are intentionally balanced: they highlight where each tool is strongest and where April Bot is a sharper fit.

April Bot

Best for: Communities that want visual welcome flows and dashboard-led server setup.

Source

A Discord bot focused on custom welcome images, reaction roles, autorole, logging, protection, analytics, leveling, and a web dashboard.

Pricing note: Free to invite; Premium pricing is shown on the April Bot pricing page.

Pros

  • Strong fit for custom welcome and goodbye images.

  • Dashboard-first setup for administration modules.

  • Marketplace and editor workflows for server visuals.

Watch-outs

  • Smaller ecosystem than the largest multi-purpose bots.

  • Some features are specialized around visual community onboarding.

MEE6

Best for: Servers that already use MEE6 and want one familiar brand for multiple add-on services.

Source

A broad Discord server-management platform with Premium, AI, Pro, and AI Characters services documented as separate subscriptions.

Pricing note: Premium applies per server; current pricing should be verified on MEE6's pricing page.

Pros

  • Large ecosystem and broad feature coverage.

  • Separate AI and personal Pro options are available.

  • Extensive public help documentation.

Watch-outs

  • Server admins may need separate services for Premium, AI, Pro, or AI Characters.

  • Premium is documented as valid for one server at a time.

Carl-bot

Best for: Servers that want granular reaction roles and moderation automation.

Source

A modular Discord bot known for reaction roles, automod, logging, custom commands, embeds, starboard, autoroles, and triggers.

Pricing note: Public feature docs are crawlable; current premium pricing should be verified on Carl-bot's site.

Pros

  • Strong reaction-role and role-management documentation.

  • Detailed automod and logging feature set.

  • Good fit for admins comfortable with detailed configuration.

Watch-outs

  • Setup can feel command-heavy for less technical admins.

  • Pricing details are less visible in crawlable public docs.

Dyno

Best for: Communities that want established moderation and utility modules.

Source

A mature moderation and utility bot with modules for automod, autoroles, reaction roles, custom commands, levels, logging, giveaways, and welcome messages.

Pricing note: Premium pricing should be verified on Dyno's premium page before publishing a fixed price.

Pros

  • Wide module coverage in public documentation.

  • Strong moderation, automod, and utility positioning.

  • Good option for general-purpose server management.

Watch-outs

  • Less focused on custom welcome-image design than April Bot.

  • Premium pricing is not always visible in crawlable docs.

ProBot

Best for: Large servers that want multipurpose moderation, welcome, leveling, and protection features.

Source

A multipurpose Discord bot for welcome images, logs, moderation, embed messages, self-assignable roles, leveling, and premium anti-raid features.

Pricing note: Tier 1 starts at $5/mo and Tier 2 starts at $10/mo as listed publicly on May 16, 2026.

Pros

  • Public pricing is easy to verify.

  • Strong welcome, leveling, logging, and self-role positioning.

  • Premium tiering is clear for larger communities.

Watch-outs

  • Premium plan choice may be more than small servers need.

  • April Bot remains more focused on visual welcome customization.

Arcane

Best for: Servers that prioritize leveling and engagement mechanics.

Source

A Discord bot focused on leveling, reaction XP, role rewards, counters, moderation, logging, welcomer features, and custom commands.

Pricing note: Arcane docs direct users to arcane.bot/premium for the most accurate pricing.

Pros

  • Detailed premium feature matrix is publicly documented.

  • Strong leveling, XP, and role-reward focus.

  • Useful for communities built around activity competition.

Watch-outs

  • Some advanced leveling and welcome options are premium-only.

  • Less focused on April-style marketplace and image-editor workflows.

Sources and freshness

Pricing and feature claims were reviewed from public pages on May 16, 2026. Recheck them before paid campaigns or major copy updates.

April Bot docsMEE6 service overviewMEE6 pricing pageCarl-bot public feature summaryDyno module listProBot pricingArcane premium docs

Related comparisons

Start with the clearest first impression

Choose one primary bot for your server's most important job, then add specialists only when a feature gap is clear.

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