If you want to move beyond “only generating images in Discord” and use Midjourney smoothly, the web version is the most hassle-free step: logging in, viewing your generation history, organizing your gallery, and downloading high-resolution images can all be done in one place. Below, following the real operation flow, I’ll walk you through the commonly used features of the Midjourney web app—and help you avoid a few of the most common sticking points along the way.
1. How to Log In and Authorize on Midjourney Web
After opening the Midjourney official website and entering the web app, clicking Log in will usually redirect you to the Discord authorization page. Confirm that the Discord account shown in the top-right corner is the one you want to use, then click “Authorize.” Only then can Midjourney access your generation history and identity information.
If you find that your gallery is empty after entering, first check whether you authorized a different Discord alt account. Midjourney’s account system is tightly bound to Discord—logging into the wrong Discord account is essentially switching to a different Midjourney account.
2. Where to View Generation History: Archive and Image Details
After logging in, it’s recommended to go to the Archive (archive/history) page first. Here you can see all your task records in Midjourney, including upscales, variations, and reruns. After opening a single image, you can usually see the corresponding prompt, parameters, and generation time, which makes it easy to recreate the same style.
When looking for older images, prioritize filters and search: locating by time range, task type, or keywords is much faster than scrolling through Discord history. For prompts you reuse often, Midjourney Web’s “see the prompt as you see the image” approach is more efficient.
3. How to Organize Your Gallery: Favorites, Hide, and Batch Selection
The idea behind organizing images in Midjourney Web is “pick first, then keep”: add the ones you like to Favorites or mark them separately first, then hide/ignore the rest to prevent the gallery from becoming messier over time. When making a series, it’s recommended to do a quick selection right after each generation—so you won’t lose track of versions later when revising.


