Guilded is an app that can provide additional support for a party or guild and hardcore gamers hoping to optimize results will find it can help players stay organized and better communicate their plans and goals. Although there are other tools that offer similar functionality, Guilded appears to provide a heightened level of support for the gaming community.

While social media apps have become big business over the last few years, gaming communities have also been growing at an impressive rate over the same period. As a result, any service or app that specifically focuses on both gaming and a support community is going to be an interesting proposition. However, a service like this faces tough competition considering many guilds are likely already heavily invested in Discord.

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Once a person downloads Guilded, the user gets a set of team-supporting features, becomes marked as a “Captain” when they create a server, and can edit and transform their space to optimize gameplay. In addition, tools including a set-up checklist, team calendar, team forum and team doc channel further help to pad out the team-building environment. For those that want a more personal setup, the digital space can be exclusive to party members with others needing to apply to join the server. Essentially, Guilded has the potential to act as a nerve center for hardcore gamers and their parties. Besides the desktop experience, Guilded can also be accessed on a mobile device with apps available to download through the App Store and Google Play.

How Guilded Works & What It Offers

Every user gets a customizable profile, and users can edit it beyond just a username and picture. The profile lists the user’s servers and games and can display the player’s username in a specific video game which can be helpful for friends to keep track of each other’s nicknames for various games. Users can link a network like an Xbox Live or PSN account to their profile for the individual games. There is also a tab to add media, which gives users the ability to show off memes, funny messages, or various achievements. In addition, users can leave statuses by posting messages in their feed and others can reply to feed messages, making the app feel like a forum and social media hybrid.

Other features include the ability for servers to be marked as a favorite and the option to post announcements to alert the entire guild of new events or planned playtime. The latter of which can be helpful if a streamer is using Guilded to connect with their followers. There’s also a forum tab which seems like an ideal place for users in a server to converse on general topics, although the server can also host a regular text-based chat with support for polls and forms. Lastly, there’s also the option to take part in audio conversations to communicate during a game, or just for recreational purposes.

Right now, there are a few glitches and bugs that prevent the app from reaching its full potential. For example, one glitch made it difficult to add games to a personal server and other reviewers have acknowledged other bugs. However, recent work shows that errors are consistently being addressed and fixed by the developers and that’s a positive sign. Overall, the app provides a dynamic experience that could prove useful for hardcore gamers and guilds.

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Source: Guilded

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