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HomeTips & TricksChatGPTMidjourney New Feature Overview: Generate Images Directly on the Web, Favorites, and Categorized Organization

Midjourney New Feature Overview: Generate Images Directly on the Web, Favorites, and Categorized Organization

2/14/2026
ChatGPT

The focus of this Midjourney update is very clear: bringing creation and management back from a “scattered stream of commands” to more intuitive web-based operations. For most users, the most noticeable changes are the ability to generate images directly on the web and the addition of favorites and categorization features that feel more like a “portfolio library.” Below, I’ll break things down by feature, explain them clearly, and provide specific ways to get started.

Direct image generation on the Midjourney web app: a smoother flow from entry to output

In the past, many people got stuck on Midjourney’s learning curve: the workflow depended on channels and was command-heavy, making it hard for beginners to just “click and use.” Now the Midjourney web app has gradually filled in the creation entry points—you can initiate generations directly in the browser, and view results and continue iterating on the same page.

In practice, it’s recommended to first standardize your commonly used prompt structure: subject + environment + lighting + lens/composition + style keywords. This way, when you repeatedly revise prompts in the Midjourney web app, you only need to swap a few variables to steadily improve output efficiency.

Favorites and categorization: pulling “good images” out of the endless scroll

Another highly practical new capability is Midjourney’s introduction of a clearer favorites/organization feature, so images no longer have to be found only by digging through history. You can store explorations in different directions (such as character design, poster styles, or scene mood) separately, making reuse faster later.

An even more recommended approach is “project-based collecting”: create one favorites folder per project, then use subcategories to save key milestone images. That way, when you review your work in Midjourney, you can quickly locate the version worth further upscaling, rather than starting generation from scratch again.

Changes to the creation experience: a more coherent iteration loop

This update brings more than just new buttons—it delivers a more coherent iteration loop: generating, comparing, filtering, and archiving can all be done within the same interface. For people who often make series, this will noticeably reduce situations where “the context is lost right after generating.”

If you’re used to high-frequency trial and error, it’s recommended to keep each Midjourney iteration focused on a single goal—for example, only adjust composition or only adjust materials. Combined with using favorites to mark key versions, you’ll find it easier to identify a “stable, reproducible style.”

A quick note before using: permissions and habits may need to be adjusted together

Depending on the account and subscription status, the feature entry points visible in the Midjourney web app may not be exactly the same—this is normal. If you can’t find an entry point, first confirm you’re logged into the same account and have switched to the correct page module, then check whether your browser is blocking scripts or the cache is outdated.

Overall, these new Midjourney features lean toward “lowering the barrier to creation + improving work management.” If you previously gave up because the workflow was too complex, it’s recommended to start directly from the web app: first set up your prompt templates and favorites-folder structure, and the experience will be much smoother.

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