Hi GermainZ,
I'm a developer participating in Reddit's Mod Tools & Migrated Apps Hackathon (April 29 – May 27, 2026) and I'd like to port Taskerbot to Devvit — Reddit's new native developer platform.
Taskerbot is MIT-licensed so I'm legally clear to proceed, but I wanted to reach out directly out of respect for the work you've put into it.
Here's what the port would involve:
- Preserving all core functionality: !rule, !spam, !ban commands
- Moving config from wiki YAML to Devvit's native App Settings panel
- Replacing the comment/report trigger with a first-class mod menu action
- Making it installable by any subreddit in one click via the Devvit App Directory (no shared bot instance required)
The Devvit version would be genuinely better for end users — no server to maintain, native Reddit UI, instant install.
I'd love to credit you fully in the app listing and the hackathon submission. If you're interested in collaborating or reviewing the port, I'd welcome that too — though I understand if you'd prefer to just let the MIT license cover it.
Let me know either way. The deadline is May 27 so I'm working quickly.
Thanks for building Taskerbot — it's clearly filled a real gap for a lot of mod teams.
Hi GermainZ,
I'm a developer participating in Reddit's Mod Tools & Migrated Apps Hackathon (April 29 – May 27, 2026) and I'd like to port Taskerbot to Devvit — Reddit's new native developer platform.
Taskerbot is MIT-licensed so I'm legally clear to proceed, but I wanted to reach out directly out of respect for the work you've put into it.
Here's what the port would involve:
The Devvit version would be genuinely better for end users — no server to maintain, native Reddit UI, instant install.
I'd love to credit you fully in the app listing and the hackathon submission. If you're interested in collaborating or reviewing the port, I'd welcome that too — though I understand if you'd prefer to just let the MIT license cover it.
Let me know either way. The deadline is May 27 so I'm working quickly.
Thanks for building Taskerbot — it's clearly filled a real gap for a lot of mod teams.