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HomeTips & TricksChatGPTMidjourney User Tutorial: Full Process from Discord Registration and Authorization to Your First Image Generation

Midjourney User Tutorial: Full Process from Discord Registration and Authorization to Your First Image Generation

2/26/2026
ChatGPT

This Midjourney user tutorial is written in the real step-by-step order a beginner would follow: first get your Discord account ready, then complete Midjourney authorization to enter the channels, and finally use commands to generate your first image and set up common options. Follow it once, and you’ll basically be able to run through the whole workflow independently—from entering prompts to getting usable images.

Prepare a Discord account and join the Midjourney server

The first step in a Midjourney user tutorial isn’t downloading software, but registering a Discord account and completing email verification. Then open the Midjourney official website in your browser and click “Join the Beta/Join,” which will automatically take you to the Discord invite page—confirm to join the server.

If you can’t see the channel list after joining, it’s usually because you haven’t finished the newcomer onboarding or haven’t passed Discord’s basic verification. Go back to the server’s rules or getting-started channel, follow the prompts to click agree and complete a brief verification, and your channel permissions will refresh.

Finish authorization login and check your profile page

The most easily overlooked step in this Midjourney user tutorial is “login status.” On the Midjourney website, choose to log in with Discord from the bottom-right corner or the menu. After authorizing, you’ll enter your personal page (Profile), where you can see your generation history and whether your account binding is working properly.

If you switch between multiple Discord accounts, it’s recommended to log out of Discord in your browser first and then re-authorize and log in to Midjourney, to avoid mixing generation history and permissions with another account. If you see “insufficient permissions/can’t use commands,” first check whether you’re in the correct server and channel.

Use /imagine in a channel to generate your first image

Enter any beginner channel with “newbies” in the name. In the input box, type “/imagine,” select the command that pops up, paste your prompt, and send. Midjourney will return a four-image grid preview; the buttons generally include U1–U4 (upscale) and V1–V4 (variations).

This Midjourney user tutorial recommends that you start with a four-part structure: “subject + style + lighting + lens,” such as character, scene, mood, and photography parameters. Describe the subject clearly first, then add style and details—image stability will be noticeably better.

Key points for common /settings parameters and aspect ratio control

If you want outputs to better match your use case, the most practical part of this Midjourney user tutorial is “/settings.” After sending it, you can choose options like the default model and style strength. Beginners are advised to use the default configuration to get the workflow running first, then adjust gradually.

Use “--ar” to control aspect ratio, for example “--ar 16:9” for a horizontal cover and “--ar 9:16” for a vertical poster; style intensity is commonly fine-tuned with “--s value.” Don’t pile on too many parameters at once, or it will be hard to tell which one is affecting the result.

Retrieve your work, download originals, and avoid queue confusion

After generation, if you want centralized management, go back to Profile on the Midjourney website to view all works by time and download them. You can also right-click images in Discord to save them, but the website is usually more convenient for retrieving historical versions—an easier habit noted in this Midjourney user tutorial.

If the channel moves too fast and you can’t find your images, you can open the notifications or “Mentions” list in Discord, or go directly to the website to search by your history. To avoid queue confusion, it’s recommended to run only 1–2 prompts at a time; once you’ve found a direction, start the next round.

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