Hi all, I’m looking for some Discord alternatives. All I really need is the ability to do voice calls and screen shares. It can be either via DM or channels, I only need to it be able to speak with a few friends that’d be open to moving over. I’ve tried Matrix/Element but there doesn’t seem to be a screen share function. There’s Teamspeak but I don’t think that’s FOSS nor does it support screen shares as well. Any other options? Basically just voice calls and screen shares is all I need, I couldn’t care about channels or servers or whatever other functionalities Discord has put into their app. Thanks!
- The Matrix network is the closest you’re likely to get to Discord’s features. - Nheko is a Matrix client that I believe can do screen sharing. - Eventually, whatever Matrix clients support Element Call might be what you want, but it’s in beta for now. - Jitsi Meet might also be worth a look, although its (optional) end-to-end encryption was too demanding for some laptops last time I tried it. - Jitsi now needs a MS or Goog account - Only for the main instance. Its selfhostable as well. - i can’t believe so many people didn’t get that part 
 
 
- Are there any limitations with the screen sharing for these alternatives? Audio support or resolution adjustment? I thought I’ve seen mentions of lack of something but I may be thinking of Discord on linux - discord doesn’t do audio on Linux - matrix clients that support pipewire should do fine - What? I haven’t had any audio issues with discord on Linux (browser or app). - screenshare audio, it just doesn’t on Linux. not the voice chat part 
 
 
 
- deleted by creator - I use the Mozilla homeserver 
 
- Is there at this point such a thing as managed hosting of Matrix? Like i pay somebody to install, keep upgraded and in general maintain a Matrix server with bridges to all the major things, then i just use it along with my small pool of users? Even further, would that be advisable? - Yes, managed hosting is available. - Element Matrix Services is the one that directly supports development of the project. There are others, too. - EMS doesn’t support bridges unless you pay for the highest tier, but the list you linked is good. 
 
- etke.cc does that. 
 
 
- deleted by creator 
- All I really need is the ability to do voice calls and screen shares. - Have you looked into Jitsi? 
- I would recommend using Matrix. But if you really want the “Discord experience” than I would suggest Revolt. - I’ve never had revolt come close to working; it always felt really buggy. - It also seems abandoned looking at their GitHub, there’s been no activity in over 7 months.- Where did you look at? The backend had a commit 2 days ago, the frontend rewrite 2 weeks ago. Looks active. - I was looking at https://github.com/revoltchat/revolt/commits/master though it’s been pointed out to me that’s an incomplete view. - Well yeah, that’s only a meta repository pointing to all the other repositories. 
 
 
- deleted by creator - Oh interesting, thanks 
 
 
- I don’t really understand Revolt, most people don’t want to self host an entire Discord (as in, a server full of servers), most people want to self host one server. 
 
- Element for Matrix 
- Since everyone is only recommending self hostable options and no hoster, here is a new candidate: - OpenTalk on tchncs.de - It is also free and open source and the server is hosted by a german who takes donations. - The also have a mumble (like Teamspeak but as you said without screenshare) and matrix instance running, which are great but not for your needs. 
- Jitsi, for sure 
- Signal. Works both on mobile and linked to desktop. - It should also work on Element Web, but not desktop clients. - Here to second the signal recommendation. Screen share and voice chat work without problems. No need to selfhost either. Secure and privacy friendly. 
 
- Matrix using element for the client and element call or jitsi should do the trick 
- deleted by creator - deleted by creator - You’re not wrong, but in terms of a polished alternative to discord… Telegram is a pretty solid option. It’s ultimately still better than Discord. - Personally, I hope Telegram improves their privacy guarantees, or enough time passes that the true E2EE apps can “catch up” to the feature set and quality of the clients. - It’s been doing the exact opposite and implementing more targeted advertising after several previous monetization attempts (including a cryptocurrency integration) flopped. - Similarly the feature set is increasingly locked behind “premium” paywall. - It’s headed in no good direction if you ask me. 
 
 
 














