{"slug": "the-5-mcp-servers-worth-connecting-first", "title": "The 5 MCP Servers Worth Connecting First", "summary": "A developer recommends five categories of MCP servers to connect first for maximum utility: filesystem, code platform, web-fetching, document/notes, and messaging. The filesystem server is highlighted as the most impactful, enabling direct file read/write. The guide advises starting with one or two servers matching real work needs and trusting first-party publishers for important accounts.", "body_md": "Once you can connect an MCP server, the next question hits fast: which ones? There are thousands of public servers now, which is wonderful for capability and overwhelming for choosing. The good news is that most people's real needs are covered by a small, well-established set.\n\nHere's the opinionated starter map — the five categories that pay off soonest, so you build something useful today instead of collecting connections you never touch.\n\nIf you connect only one server, make it this one. A filesystem server lets your assistant read and write files in a folder you choose, which turns it from something you copy and paste into and out of, into something that works directly with your documents, drafts, notes, and data.\n\nIt's the most tangible \"aha\" moment in MCP — watching a chat assistant reach into a real folder — and it benefits everyone, technical or not. Start here, point it at one dedicated folder, and you'll feel the shift from feeding the assistant to directing it.\n\nIf software is your work, a server connecting your code platform is transformative. It lets the assistant read issues, examine code across a project, and help manage the work where it actually lives, instead of you pasting fragments back and forth.\n\nBecause the assistant can see the surrounding code rather than an isolated snippet, its suggestions fit. This is the connection that turns \"help me with this function\" into \"read this issue, find the relevant code, and propose a fix.\"\n\nAn unconnected assistant only knows what it was trained on, with a hard edge it can't cross. A web-fetching server gives it a way to pull in and read current pages on demand.\n\nAsked about something recent or specific, it can retrieve the actual source and reason from it, rather than guessing from stale internal knowledge. For research, fact-checking, or anything time-sensitive, this is the server that grounds your assistant in what's actually published now.\n\nPair the outside world with your own materials. A server that reaches your documents and notes — files on disk or a connected knowledge tool — lets the assistant blend external information with your internal context.\n\nIt can pull the right document into a question, cross-reference your notes against a current source, or assemble a briefing from both. The assistant stops being a general oracle and becomes one that knows your specific material.\n\nIf your day is conversations as much as creation, a server connecting your messaging platform earns its place. It can summarize a channel you've been away from, or help draft a reply in context, without you hunting through history.\n\nThis one shines for people whose work is coordination, turning a wall of unread messages into something the assistant can digest and act on.\n\nNotice the pattern: start with the filesystem server, then add the one or two that match where your real work lives — code, the web, your knowledge, or your communication. Resist connecting all five at once. Each server is a capability and a responsibility, and a small, deliberate stack is easier to trust and easier to keep secure than a sprawling one. Add the rest as specific needs appear, not upfront.\n\nOne more thing before you connect anything that touches an important account: take a moment to trust the publisher. Prefer first-party servers (built by the company that owns the service) for anything that genuinely matters.\n\n**Free starter:** I put the essential servers plus a 5-question trust check and the 10-minute setup onto a free 5-page cheat sheet: [MCP Quick-Start Cheat Sheet](https://promptmasterstore.gumroad.com/l/mcp-cheat-sheet)\n\n**Go deeper:** For the full picture — every host, evaluating servers safely, real workflows, and a 7-day plan to build your stack — there's the complete guide: [MCP Made Simple](https://promptmasterstore.gumroad.com/l/mcp-made-simple)\n\nWhich server would you connect first? Curious whether people start with files like I did, or jump straight to their code.", "url": "https://wpnews.pro/news/the-5-mcp-servers-worth-connecting-first", "canonical_source": "https://dev.to/promptmaster/the-5-mcp-servers-worth-connecting-first-19c0", "published_at": "2026-06-17 07:53:42+00:00", "updated_at": "2026-06-17 08:22:00.465963+00:00", "lang": "en", "topics": ["developer-tools", "ai-tools", "ai-agents", "large-language-models", "generative-ai"], "entities": ["MCP", "Prompt Master Store"], "alternates": {"html": "https://wpnews.pro/news/the-5-mcp-servers-worth-connecting-first", "markdown": "https://wpnews.pro/news/the-5-mcp-servers-worth-connecting-first.md", "text": "https://wpnews.pro/news/the-5-mcp-servers-worth-connecting-first.txt", "jsonld": "https://wpnews.pro/news/the-5-mcp-servers-worth-connecting-first.jsonld"}}