Every single thing about how Tootsies behaves in your server lives in /menu. No config files. No code. Just one command, mod-only.
The one idea: type /menu and a panel opens. Tap through the pages, change things, and she updates in real time. That’s it.
The /menu panel. Six pages, navigated by tapping. The currently-open page is highlighted purple. The master switch lives in the top-right corner of every page.
The master switch
the biggest dial
One button takes Tootsies completely dark in the server — no replies, no posts, no slash commands (except /menu itself so you can flip her back on). It’s bigger than just turning the mood off, which only mutes her proactive posts but leaves mentions live.
Master switch = completely gone. Mood off = quiet but still there. Use the switch when you need total silence; use mood off for a calm day.
The pages of /menu
one menu, a page per thing
Opening /menu drops you on page 1. The more ► button walks you forward; ◀ back goes back. Each page owns exactly one concern so you always know where to look.
The full page chain. You land on page 1 and press more ► to walk forward. Experiments has a shortcut jump to Models. Tune is last on purpose — it’s the raw numbers and most servers never need it.
The pages, one by one
what lives where
Six pages, navigated with the arrow buttons. Here’s what each one holds.
Six pages, grouped by what you’re configuring. The most used ones are first; Tune (raw numbers) is last on purpose.
Experiments: try before you ship
the safe way to roll out new features
New features don’t just appear in the room. Each one has a three-stage rollout switch so mods can preview it privately before anyone else sees it.
Off → Staging → Production. Start at staging, read a few days of output in #bot-logs, then flip to production when it feels right.
Typical flow: flip a feature to STAGING on a Friday. Watch the bot-logs channel over the weekend. Happy with what you see? Flip to PRODUCTION on Monday. Nobody in the room saw anything experimental.
Tune: the actual dials
caps, cooldowns, cadences
The Tune page is the last one — it’s the raw-numbers editor for mods who want to go further. Tap a row to open a small form and type a new value. Everything saves instantly.
Each row is one tap to edit. The purple values on the right are the current settings. Defaults work fine for most servers.
Most servers never need to touch Tune. The defaults were picked to feel natural. But if your server is very active (or very quiet), the chime-in cadence and daily caps are the first things to adjust.
under the hoodBuilt in-house · settings stored per server, no outside service