The two french dropouts behind one of the largest Discord moderation platforms

· New York Post

If you were to pitch MEE6’s scope to a room full of venture capitalists (tens of millions of servers, hundreds of millions of users, a profitable subscription business, and a team of dozens), they would nod approvingly and ask about the cap table. The founders, Brendan Rius and Anis Belkacem, would say there is no cap table: they own the whole thing.

Neither founder took a meeting with the major VC firms. They dropped out of college in France, taught themselves everything that mattered by shipping products nobody remembers, and built what is now one of the most widely used community-management platforms on Discord without outside capital or investors.

This makes them difficult to place. The tech press has a well-rehearsed template for founder stories: the Stanford dorm room, the Y Combinator batch, the Series A pop. Rius and Belkacem fit none of it. The company, per the founders, is profitable, unencumbered by debt or outside shareholders, and almost entirely unknown outside the Discord ecosystem it quietly dominates. Which is exactly how they seem to prefer it.

Two Kids Who Learned by Building

Brendan Rius and Anis Belkacem share an origin story that differs mainly in the details. Both started coding at 12. Both spent their teenage years releasing products on the internet and watching what happened.

Belkacem was obsessed with the question of what makes people show up. He launched a long series of websites and small tools before turning 20, each one a test of whether strangers on the internet would care enough to sign up, stick around or come back tomorrow. Most of them didn’t last and that was the point. Every failure gave him a clearer read on what worked and what didn’t. By the time most people his age were choosing a major, he had already built, launched, and killed more products than some founders manage in a career.

Rius was obsessed with how things worked underneath. At 14, he launched a file-sharing platform called Sharea that pulled in thousands of users and taught him what it meant to keep a product running for people who depended on it. At 16, curious about the limits of the systems around him, he found a security flaw on a major financial institution’s website. That got him invited to Le Web, one of Europe’s biggest tech conferences, where he was among the youngest speakers on stage.

Rius was later picked for the No MBA Program at Kima Ventures, which was nine months of sitting in on actual business decisions instead of reading case studies about them. “Those years taught me that systems are only as resilient as the assumptions behind them,” Rius says. “That turned out to be the most useful lesson I could have had before building something that has to run at scale.”

Belkacem had dropped out of college by then, after realizing he was learning more from his own projects than from anything on the syllabus and had set himself a pace of launching one new thing every two weeks because he believed that building was a skill you only keep if you use it. Six months into that routine, one of the projects started getting traction and that project became MEE6. Rius, around the same time, had been grinding through his own series of attempts: a dating app, custom phone covers. None of them went anywhere, but they left him knowing things you only learn from running a live product.

When they met and started working together, it made sense almost immediately. Belkacem had spent years learning what people want from a product, while Rius had spent years learning how to build things that hold up once people actually start using them. Between the two of them, there wasn’t much they hadn’t already gotten wrong at least once.

Building MEE6

When Rius and Belkacem turned their attention to Discord, the platform was expanding rapidly beyond its origins as a gaming app, becoming the default gathering place for every kind of online community imaginable, from university study groups to crypto projects to fan bases with tens of thousands of members. The problem was that Discord gave people the space to build communities, but almost none of the tools to run them.

If you wanted to moderate a server, filter spam, assign roles, and welcome new members, you had to stitch together a dozen single-purpose bots and hope they kept working. Most server owners were volunteers doing this in their spare time, and it was burning them out.

MEE6 started from a simple observation: nobody wanted to deal with twelve bots; they wanted one that did everything. Moderation, role management, engagement features, automated announcements, custom commands, all in one place, all configurable without writing a line of code. It may sound obvious in retrospect, but at the time, nobody had built it properly.

Rius and Belkacem had the skills to build it and no reason to wait for someone else to do it first. So they did, quickly, the way they’d always worked: ship something, see if people use it, fix what’s broken, repeat.

Funding was never really on the table. They were two French dropouts with no connections to investors and, honestly, not much interest in acquiring any. But the decision to bootstrap wasn’t just about necessity. Belkacem is blunt about it: when there’s no outside money, you can’t afford to build something nobody asked for. If a feature doesn’t prove itself quickly, it gets killed. Taking outside money would have meant answering to shareholders and the whole point of MEE6 was to answer to the people using it.

So they tested everything cheaply before building it properly, ran small experiments instead of committing months of development time to features based on guesswork and treated every euro they spent as if it were the last one they had, which for a while it more or less was. That habit stuck. The company still operates the same way.

An Unusual Success Story

What’s remarkable about MEE6 isn’t the scale, though the scale is impressive. It’s that the company got there without any of the machinery that the tech industry considers essential. No fundraising rounds, no advisory board, no growth team optimizing metrics that have nothing to do with whether the product is actually good. It grew because server owners kept telling other server owners about it, which is the slowest and most durable kind of growth there is.

“We never had a launch day,” Rius says. “We just kept making the product better, and more people showed up.”

The same logic is now being applied elsewhere. Rius and Belkacem recently launched T22, a community management platform for Telegram, built on the premise that the problem MEE6 solved isn’t unique to Discord. Wherever large online communities form faster than the tools to manage them, the same frustrations appear. The way they see it, Telegram group owners are facing many of the same challenges Discord server owners faced years ago: growing member bases, limited native moderation tools, and volunteer administrators looking for a little extra support.

They identified a gap, built something to fill it, and kept iterating until their product began growing. In an industry that loves a good announcement, Brendan Rius and Anis Belkacem never made one. They just kept shipping.