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That's My BIS is a loot distribution management tool for World of Warcraft guilds, mainly designed for Loot Council scenarios. It helps raid teams view, in one place, which items members want, what loot they have received in the past, and whether there are any notes, making it easier to make fairer allocation decisions. The product supports multiple versions, including Classic, SOD, TBC, WoTLK, Cataclysm, and MoP.
Its core modules include guild registration, member gear wishlist/BIS records, historical loot records, notes, public loot tables, and permission control tied to Discord roles. A guild leader needs to register a Discord server and configure the roles allowed to access the site in Guild Settings. The system recommends using roles such as Guild Master, Officer, Class Leader, Raider, and Member in Discord, then importing them into the website to distinguish permissions—for example, a Raid Leader can allocate loot, while ordinary members cannot.
The product is heavily dependent on Discord: login uses Discord OAuth2, and a bot is used to identify server members and roles. The documentation states that it collects Discord usernames, IDs, avatar IDs, and related server roles. The OAuth2 scopes used are identify and guilds; guilds data is not stored and is only used to identify which registered guilds a user belongs to and to populate the guild registration dropdown. The website also uses Google Analytics. Deployment appears to be an online hosted service. Although the source code is described as public, there is no official self-hosting option or API described.
The page does not disclose formal plans or pricing, nor does it specify any limitations for a free version. The login page notes that the site is independently operated and relies on ad revenue and donations, and recommends supporting it through Patreon. Support channels are mainly Discord, email, and Patreon. The author also states that they may not regularly check Discord or GitHub notifications, so support is closer to that of an independent developer project rather than a standard enterprise-grade SLA.
Its strengths are its focused use case and close fit with Discord-based guild management workflows, which can reduce the effort required for a Loot Council to gather information. The public source code also adds a degree of transparency. The drawbacks are that Discord is mandatory, limiting general applicability; objects such as members, Raids, and guilds cannot be permanently deleted and can only be disabled or marked inactive; and pricing, compliance, and support commitments are all incomplete. It is suitable for WoW guilds, raid teams, and loot councils that use Discord as their collaboration hub, but not for organizations that require enterprise-grade compliance, auditing, and localized support.
The collected text does not provide information about access from mainland China, network connectivity, or local payment options. Given its reliance on Discord, Patreon, and Google Analytics, actual usability for Chinese users may be affected by the availability of those external services, but the status of the site itself cannot be determined from the text alone. Possible alternatives include RC Loot Council, WoWHead resources, Guilds of WoW, or building a custom loot management workflow with Google Sheets or other spreadsheets.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on thatsmybis.com official site.
thatsmybis.com is an Unknown Gaming provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach thatsmybis.com directly.