If you want to “move” Midjourney from Discord to a better-organized web interface, it’s actually pretty smooth to use. This article only covers the core operations of Midjourney Web: how to authorize and sign in, view your own gallery, quickly filter and reuse prompts, and download and save your generated images in high resolution.
1. Enter the Midjourney website and complete authorized sign-in
Open your browser and visit midjourney.com, then click “Sign in.” Signing in on Midjourney Web relies on your Discord account: you’ll be redirected to Discord’s authorization page, and after confirming, you’ll be taken back to Midjourney automatically.
If you have multiple Discord accounts and want to switch between them, it’s recommended to use different browser profiles (or an incognito window) to log into Discord separately. That way, when authorizing on Midjourney, you’re less likely to pick the wrong account and end up with your gallery “mixed up” across accounts.
2. Find your gallery: quickly locate by time and keywords
After logging in, go to your personal page. You can usually view your Midjourney history feed through an entry like “My Images / Archive.” The advantage here is that browsing is more intuitive and saves time compared with scrolling through messages in Discord.
If you want to find a specific job, use search or filters first: narrow it down with prompt keywords, a date range, or by viewing only a certain size/version. Midjourney’s image cards typically let you open them to view the larger image and generation details; once you’ve found the right version, then proceed.


