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Discord Is About to Force You to Prove Your Age

On Monday, Discord announced its plan to begin rolling out mandatory age verification globally. Starting in March, new and existing accounts will start moving over to a “teen-by-default” setting, which will lock certain chats and features away until the account’s owner proves they’re an adult. Here’s what you’ll lose, how to get it back, and for good measure, what your other options are.

Discord will require age verification starting in March

In its announcement, Discord said the new age verification settings will start with a “phased global rollout” in March, so it may be some time until it hits you. However, once the changes make their way to your region, you’ll lose access to the following features until you verify your age:

How to verify your age in Discord

Discord has two ways to verify your age, though it will tell you if you need to go through the process. To the platform’s credit, it won’t suddenly strip away a bunch of features from you without explanation.

To start verifying your age on Discord, either click Get Started on a prompt the platform should send you once age verification hits your region, or navigate to User Settings > My Account > Age Group to see your age group and verify from there.

Now, you can either take a video selfie or scan a valid government ID. For video selfies, just select Take a selfie from the verification page, follow the on-screen instructions, and click Done to submit. For verifying through a government ID, select Use your ID, scan the provided QR code with your mobile device, take a clear photo of your ID on said device, and tap Done to submit.

Discord says that video selfies used for age verification are processed purely on-device, and that while photos of government IDs do go to “vendor partners” for verification, they are “deleted quickly—in most cases, immediately after age confirmation.”

Once you’ve submitted your video selfie or ID, the app will then begin the process of assigning you an “age group,” which you’ll be able to see under User Settings > My Account > Age Group. Discord says most users only need to verify once, but that you might need to provide a government ID in addition to a video selfie if the app can’t confidently determine your age from just a face scan. You’re also able to attempt re-verification at any time, but if the app determines that you’re under the 13-year-old minimum for using Discord, your account will be banned. (You can appeal this and attempt to re-instate your Discord account via an ID.)

According to Discord, the age verification process “typically takes just a few minutes,” and you’ll get a notification and DM once it’s completed.

Best Discord alternatives that don’t use age verification

As countries around the world add new laws for age verification online (Discord mentions the UK and Australia in particular), it seems like Discord is just throwing its hands up and deciding to play it as safe as possible by taking the feature global. The move mimics similar decisions from Google, ChatGPT, and Roblox, but even adult users might be uncomfortable with it, since they’ll need to show the company—and the company’s third-party processors—personal identifying information to comply with it.

If that leaves a bad taste in your mouth, there are a few Discord alternatives you can try that don’t yet require age verification, although they might not completely match the app’s feature set:

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