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So, I've been having issues with voice chat on Discord and I'm looking for alternatives. In my search, I came across Mumble, here. Does anyone here have experience, or information regarding Mumble, or a better alternative to Discord with better latency? Is it relatively easy to set up? Is it safe? Any advice and help is greatly appreciated.

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[-] splendoruranium@infosec.pub 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

So, I’ve been having issues with voice chat on Discord and I’m looking for alternatives. In my search, I came across Mumble, here. Does anyone here have experience, or information regarding Mumble, or a better alternative to Discord with better latency? Is it relatively easy to set up? Is it safe? Any advice and help is greatly appreciated.

Been running a server for my friends for over a decade now. Can recommend. It's just one apt-get to set up, runs on a Pi Zero for a dozen people, has clients available for pretty much any platform and doesn't really require any maintenance. Latency will depend on the routing between you and your friends' ISPs, of course, but the whole purpose of the software itself was to provide a low-latency voicechat server for gaming.

But: That's it. You don't get anything else. It's a barebones voice chat server. You can set up rooms and have basic text-functionality, but you don't get any fancy user management, no full-fledged chatrooms, no persistence beyond the room setup and only limited backend options. Keep that in mind.

[-] nfreak@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 month ago

I haven't used Mumble since like 2010, looks like it's still the exact same tool as it ever was, and that's honestly all it really needs to be. Love to see it

[-] waddle_dee@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

Would it be something that I could add to my home server? I have a setup for Nextcloud, apache, Grocy, Jellyfin, etc. So, I didn't know if I could just throw Mumble on there. In addition, I greatly appreciate that it's barebones! I don't want, or need, any of the extraneous stuff Discord has. I just want to voice chat, and text like the old AIM days.

[-] themachine@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

The short answer to "can you add it to your home server" is yes. It's not like there is some cap beyond your own system resources that prevents you from running multiple services.

[-] waddle_dee@lemmy.world 0 points 1 month ago

Awesome, didn't know if there was any sort of risk associated. Thanks!

[-] themachine@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

Well there can be some "risk" depending on how you're going about this. I'm assuming you will be wanting people outside of your home network to be able to each your server. To do so you'll either have to open a port in your LAN firewall and expose your server on said port to the internet, or have all users who will be using this on a VPN you create.

The former being "more risky" but quantifying that risk is difficult. Ive done this in the past and don't personally see it as a big deal. My current mumble server does not live on my LAN but I will be pulling my server out of a local data center in the nearish future and running it out of my home once more at which point a number of publicly accessible services will be hosted from my LAN.

[-] traches@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 month ago

I’ve spent many nights roaming in an EVE online pirate gang shooting the shit on mumble. Can recommend.

[-] Bahnd@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

Ha [Internet high five], there is a thing about EvE online players and being opinionated nerds about VOIP solutions.

[-] irmadlad@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

[Internet high five]

or as we did back in the olden days: ^5

[-] brygphilomena@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 month ago

I still think it's better than discord. And alliance auth tied in super easy.

Besides, I think it's better that it's usually hosted on an individual corp/alliance level.

Shut should do one thing. And do it well.

[-] jerkface@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 month ago
[-] possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip 0 points 1 month ago

...10 years ago

[-] sem@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 1 month ago

I used Mumble to 5-queue league of legends and feed the other team. Mumble worked perfectly and was very boring, letting me focus on getting caught out and focused down.

[-] njordomir@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

My Minecraft pals used mumble at various points. It's less polished than some options. I like the FOSS and the simplicity but the certificates confused me as a noob. Would still recommend.

[-] Bahnd@lemmy.world 0 points 1 month ago

Some expirence on some self-hosted VOIP solutions from my EvE online days and I self-host a Teamspeak instance (my nerds like it, get off my lawn).

Mumble in terms of its UI and user expirence, the worst of the major VOIP projects (looks very 2008), however it is by far the best in terms of server stability, plugin compatibility and security. To quote my old EvE admin "Mumble will take the team two weeks to set up correctly, and drive them mad, but once thats done they will not need to touch the config again". Plus it not requiring a license allows large orgs to use it freely. Ever have a need 2.5k+ VOIP users all trying to talk over eachother? Mumble is the only free application that will handle that without issue.

Teamspeak3 is what I run, and for small communities its perfect. TS5 exists, and the devs keep trying to make "We have Discord at home" and its just a UI fork, they all run the same server backend. As for features, TS3 has the best of ease of set up and granular permissions with API tools to allow for remote or automated managment. For user counts, anything beyond that of a small guild in any game will require a license, they are cheap (I just renewed my 30$ a year license and didnt have to reboot). Its drawbacks are that it struggles after several hundred users (its heavier on server hardware than mumble is) and user accounts with permissions can break the server. Fortunatly settings are managed by a local database so backups of server state and files are easy.

I remember Ventrilo existing, thats about it.

Hardware wise, a new pi should be fine, older models might have issues based on expected user load. Network load is not significant for normal hobbiest user counts, security is not any different than normal homelab internet services.

Let me know if there is anything I can help with.

[-] Crozekiel@lemmy.zip 1 points 1 month ago

Shit I miss Ventrilo... Setting up custom binds so I could talk shit about the raid leader directly to the other warlock in the group just by pressing a different "talk" button was amazing. And I can still here the push-to-talk notification sounds... When the guild moved to Discord, I died a little inside and didn't even know it yet. Yea, we have a meme channel now, but at what cost??

[-] Tanoh@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

other warlock

It is always the warlocks that are the problem.

Signed, a mage

this post was submitted on 05 Nov 2025
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