secret-tools/secret-tool — explained in plain English
Analysis updated 2026-05-18
Watch the repo for early access if you are interested in future Discord bot tools.
Star the project to signal support before any tools are publicly released.
| secret-tools/secret-tool | fractalfir/crustc | inbrainfun/inbrain | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stars | 331 | 331 | 332 |
| Language | — | C | TypeScript |
| Setup difficulty | — | hard | moderate |
| Complexity | — | 5/5 | 4/5 |
| Audience | general | developer | developer |
Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.
Secret-Tools describes itself as a project building classified utilities for Discord, including bots, panels, and automation tools. The GitHub page is styled like a stylized manifesto rather than a typical README, filled with animated banners, badges, and repeated calls to star the repository before revealing any of the actual tools. Based on the badges shown, the project uses JavaScript, TypeScript, Node.js, and Discord.js, along with Git, Bash, and Linux for its development environment. The page includes a status table calling the project an early access power layer, but it does not explain what any specific tool does, how to install anything, or what problem the tools solve for a Discord server owner. A roadmap section shows progress bars for four areas: core systems at 40 percent, a Discord arsenal at 30 percent, a deployment layer at 20 percent, and a public release at 10 percent. No further detail is given about what these sections contain. The repository does not include setup instructions, usage examples, or a list of finished features. The overall tone is promotional, encouraging visitors to star the repository for early access to future drops rather than documenting anything currently usable. There is no license information anywhere in the README, so it is unclear whether the eventual code, once released, will be open for others to use or modify. For someone landing on this page hoping to learn what Secret-Tools actually does today, the honest answer is that very little is documented. It appears to be a project in early planning or development, presented with heavy visual styling to build anticipation, but without concrete Discord bot features, commands, or installation steps published yet. Anyone interested would need to watch the repository for updates rather than expect a working tool right now.
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Verify against the repo before relying on details.