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TL;DR
Skool Reality Revolution isn't a Skool.com feature or plan. It's a community — most likely Brian Scott's The Reality Revolution group, which sits in the manifestation, consciousness, and quantum-mindset corner of skool.com. The platform itself just hosts the group: a feed, a course tab, a leaderboard, group calls. "Reality Revolution" is the brand the owner runs on top. If you're trying to join, you'd find the link in the host's podcast or YouTube description. If you're an owner running a similar consciousness/mindset community, the second half of this page covers what skool.com does well and what it leaves to you (where tools4skool fills gaps).

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What "Reality Revolution" refers to
Brian Scott runs The Reality Revolution — a podcast, YouTube channel, and Skool community focused on consciousness, manifestation, parallel realities, and quantum-jumping concepts. The Skool group is where his audience continues the conversation between podcast episodes: meditation tracks, weekly intention threads, member testimonials, and live calls. Communities in this niche on Skool tend to share a few traits: a heavy focus on member-generated content (people posting their own manifestation wins), structured weekly themes, and a course library that bundles guided meditations or visualization audio. There are similar groups on Skool — Joe Dispenza-adjacent communities, neurolinguistic programming groups, lucid dreaming circles. "Reality Revolution" is one of the named ones, not a category.
How Skool.com hosts groups like this
Skool.com gives every community a fixed shape: a Discussions feed, a Classroom (course modules), a Calendar (live calls), Members directory, Leaderboard (gamified XP), and DMs. The owner picks a name, branding, price (free or paid), and welcome material. That's basically it. The platform stays opinionated on purpose — no plugins, no Zapier-style automations, no custom fields. So a community like Reality Revolution looks structurally identical to a copywriting community or a fitness community: same tabs, same gamification. The differentiation is content, calls, and member culture. Owners can't theme the page much beyond a banner and a few colors, which keeps everything mobile-app-friendly but limits brand expression.
How joining a Skool community works
Two paths. Free communities — click an invite link, create a Skool account (email + name), and you're in. The owner can require an application question. Paid communities — same, but Skool collects card details via Stripe and charges monthly. Skool itself takes no platform fee from the owner on member payments (just standard Stripe processing); the owner pays Skool a flat ~$99/month for hosting. Cancellation is one click from the member side. There's a 14-day free trial pattern many owners use, set in the group's settings. If "Reality Revolution" is paid, expect that flow. If it's free, even simpler.
For owners running similar communities
Mindset and consciousness communities tend to be DM-heavy. Members ask private questions, share vulnerable stuff, want personal acknowledgment. Skool.com's native DM tooling is bare — no templates, no scheduling, no automation when someone joins. That's the gap tools4skool fills. You can build a multi-step welcome DM sequence (with images — meditation thumbnails, quote cards), set a churn-saver DM that fires within 60 seconds when a payment fails, mine comments to find your most engaged members, and use slash commands to fire pre-written replies fast. For a 1,000+ member spiritual community, that's the difference between feeling responsive and disappearing. Free plan covers one sequence and 20 DMs/day; paid starts at $29/month.
What Skool deliberately doesn't do
No native automations, no email broadcasts (you have to post in the feed and rely on push), no native CRM, no member tags, no segmentation, no analytics beyond basic engagement counts. This is intentional — Skool's pitch is simplicity. But for owners with real revenue (the Reality Revolution-tier brands often pull six figures from a Skool group), the gaps start to bite. That's why a market of third-party tools has grown around skool.com — Skoot, tools4skool, several CSV-export utilities. None of them are official integrations; they all work via Chrome extension on top of your existing Skool session, which keeps things simple but means you should pick tools you trust to handle DM tone.
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