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Local stdio MCP server for VRChat friends, worlds, groups, events, notifications, status, avatars, and VRCX history.
Local stdio MCP server for VRChat friends, worlds, groups, events, notifications, status, avatars, and VRCX history.
Unofficial local Model Context Protocol tools for VRChat friends, worlds, groups, events, notifications, status, invites, and local VRCX history.
VRChat MCP runs locally through stdio. Your VRChat auth cookies stay on your machine and default to your OS keychain, with file storage as the fallback when a keychain backend is unavailable. Curated write tools, generated read/write tools, and read-only VRCX local-history tools are available by default; use your MCP client or agent harness to approve account-changing tool calls.
This project is unofficial and is not affiliated with VRChat Inc.
VRChat does not provide a public OAuth flow for third-party API applications. VRChat's Creator Guidelines say API applications should not request or store VRChat login credentials, auth tokens, or session data, should identify themselves with a clear User-Agent, should cache/back off instead of sending unmetered requests, and should not act on behalf of another user.
This project is therefore intended only as a local, user-controlled personal tool. Do not run it as a hosted/public MCP service, do not collect anyone else's credentials or cookies, do not automate spam or harassment, and do not use it to evade VRChat enforcement or moderation. Use write tools only for actions you would intentionally perform yourself in VRChat.
Requirements:
keytar, better-sqlite3).On headless Linux or containers without a keychain daemon such as libsecret, set VRCHAT_MCP_COOKIE_STORE=file for explicit persistent cookie storage.
The npm package is the normal install path:
npx -y @basicbit/vrchat-mcp
The server is also published to the official MCP Registry as io.github.BASIC-BIT/vrchat-mcp.
Most clients use one of these shapes. No environment variables are required for the default setup.
OpenCode uses an array-valued command field.
Add this to ~/.config/opencode/opencode.json:
{
"mcp": {
"vrchat": {
"type": "local",
"command": ["npx", "-y", "@basicbit/vrchat-mcp"],
"enabled": true
}
}
}
These clients usually split the executable into command plus args.
Use this in clients that expect an mcpServers object:
{
"mcpServers": {
"vrchat": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@basicbit/vrchat-mcp"]
}
}
}
VS Code uses a servers object instead of mcpServers.
Use this in .vscode/mcp.json:
{
"servers": {
"vrchat": {
"type": "stdio",
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@basicbit/vrchat-mcp"]
}
}
}
Add this to ~/.codex/config.toml or .codex/config.toml:
[mcp_servers.vrchat]
command = "npx"
args = ["-y", "@basicbit/vrchat-mcp"]
startup_timeout_sec = 40
If your Windows client cannot spawn npx directly, use cmd as the command and put /c, npx, -y, and @basicbit/vrchat-mcp in the argument list.
After adding the server to your MCP client, ask it to call vrchat_auth_begin. The tool returns a local browser login URL.
After logging in, call vrchat_auth_status to confirm the session. By default, cookies are stored in the OS keychain so the login survives MCP server restarts. If the OS keychain is unavailable, VRChat MCP falls back to file storage.
Do not ask another person to use this login flow for you. Do not send the local login URL, cookies, or session files to hosted tools or third-party services.
Useful auth tools:
vrchat_auth_begin: start local browser login.vrchat_auth_status: check whether the server is logged in.vrchat_auth_logout: clear the stored session.Examples:
Show my VRChat status and current location.
Which friends are online, grouped by world?
Search my friends for Alice and show their profile.
Find public VRChat events happening today.
Invite Bob to my current instance.
Show recent worlds from my local VRCX history.
VRChat MCP exposes curated tools plus generated read/write tools by default. Curated tools cover common tasks with compact, agent-friendly inputs and outputs.
Common curated tools include:
vrchat_mevrchat_friends_overviewvrchat_friends_searchvrchat_friend_detailsvrchat_worlds_searchvrchat_group_profilevrchat_events_upcomingvrchat_notifications_recentvrchat_invitevrchat_group_invitevrchat_friend_requestvrchat_boopvrcx_instances_recentGenerated OpenAPI tools use these naming patterns:
vrchat_read_<operationId> for GET operations.vrchat_write_<operationId> for non-GET operations.Generated read and write tools are enabled by default. Set VRCHAT_MCP_DISABLE_GENERATED_READ_TOOLS=true or VRCHAT_MCP_DISABLE_GENERATED_WRITE_TOOLS=true to hide them, or use JSON config to narrow either surface to specific operation IDs:
{
"generatedReadTools": { "enabled": true, "operationIds": ["getAvatarStyles"] },
"generatedWriteTools": { "enabled": true, "operationIds": ["selectAvatar"] }
}
When an operationIds list is empty and that generated tool class is enabled, all generated operations in that class are exposed except hard-skipped operations and generated read operations with curated replacements. Prefer curated tools for common workflows, but generated tools keep the local server capable as the VRChat API evolves.
See docs/tools-guide.md for a short guide and docs/tools.md for the generated catalog.
Curated and generated write tools are enabled by default so the local MCP server is usable from the first run. Your MCP client or agent harness is expected to control tool-call permission, approval, and denial for account-changing actions.
To force read-only mode, add this env fragment inside the server entry for your MCP client:
{
"env": {
"VRCHAT_MCP_ALLOW_WRITES": "false"
}
}
Only use write tools when you intend this local MCP server to perform VRChat account actions. Bulk social tools are capped and back off on 429s, but you are responsible for avoiding spam, harassment, or unwanted automation.
For group write tools, you can restrict writes to specific group IDs with a JSON config file:
{
"groups": {
"allowlist": ["grp_abc123"]
}
}
Then set VRCHAT_MCP_CONFIG_FILE to that file path in your MCP client config.
Configuration is optional. Defaults cover normal local use.
Common environment variables:
| Variable | Use |
|---|---|
VRCHAT_MCP_CONFIG_FILE |
Path to a JSON config file. |
VRCHAT_MCP_USER_AGENT |
Descriptive user agent for VRChat API requests. |
VRCHAT_MCP_LOG_LEVEL |
debug, info, warn, or error. |
VRCHAT_MCP_COOKIE_STORE |
keychain, file, or memory. Defaults to keychain. |
VRCHAT_MCP_COOKIE_FILE |
Cookie file path when VRCHAT_MCP_COOKIE_STORE=file. |
VRCHAT_MCP_ALLOW_WRITES |
Set to false for read-only mode. |
Example JSON config:
{
"auth": { "cookieStore": "file" },
"writes": { "allow": false },
"groups": { "allowlist": ["grp_abc123"] },
"cache": { "enabled": true },
"vrcx": { "enabled": true }
}
See src/config/defaults.json for all defaults.
git clone https://github.com/BASIC-BIT/vrchat-mcp.git
cd vrchat-mcp
npm install
npm run build
npm run check
Useful scripts:
npm run dev: run from src/index.ts.npm run start: run the built server from dist/.npm run mcp:login: start login through the local harness.npm run mcp:status: check auth through the local harness.npm run smoke:live: run the opt-in live smoke check.npm run generate:tools-docs: regenerate docs/tools.md.npm run generate:schemas: regenerate OpenAPI schemas.Live E2E tests and LLM evals are opt-in. See docs/evals.md for details.
MIT. See LICENSE.
Run in your terminal:
claude mcp add vrchat-mcp -- npx