Recently, Midjourney has made “Personalized Settings” feel more like a manageable set of creative preferences: the setup process is faster, and you can create multiple personalized profiles. At the same time, Midjourney has also connected custom shortcuts between the website and Discord, making it easier to enter frequently used prompts.
What exactly has been updated in Midjourney Personalized Settings?
This time, Midjourney’s focus isn’t on adding a bunch of new parameters, but on making the question “what style do you like” more sustainable. The official direction is clear: the personalized-settings workflow will be simplified, allowing you to establish preferences faster and reduce the cost of repeated trial and error.
Another key change is “multiple personalized setting profiles.” In the past, you may have had to use the same aesthetic for every subject; now Midjourney lets you prepare different preferences for different types of work and simply switch between them when needed.
How to complete Personalized Settings in Midjourney (a faster getting-started version)
In the Midjourney interface, go to the “Personalization” page from the sidebar, then follow the guided flow to choose your image preferences. The core step is “ranking images”: by picking the image you prefer, you’re effectively telling Midjourney the composition, texture, and stylistic direction you want.
Afterward, it’s recommended to do a small-scale validation: use the same prompt with personalization turned on and off, and see whether character rendering, lighting, and color tones align more closely with your aesthetic—then decide whether to make personalization your default workflow.


