Midjourney has recently made a noticeable improvement to the experience on its official website. The most obvious change is that viewing images and finding images has become faster. For people who generate images often and need to look back at prompts and versions, Midjourney is no longer just an image-generation tool—it feels more like a readily organized personal archive. Below, following the real user flow, we’ll sort out these new Midjourney features.
Smoother scrolling in My Images: A major boost to the efficiency of reviewing your work
The new Midjourney website makes image browsing feel more like an “album”: after opening any image in My Images, you can use the mouse wheel to quickly and continuously browse the next/previous image. This detail may seem simple, but when you generate dozens of images a day and need to repeatedly compare styles, the cost of reviewing in Midjourney drops noticeably.
More importantly, you no longer need to frequently go back to the list view and relocate the image; the entire browsing path is more seamless. For those who need to dig through past images to find that “almost right” alternative draft, this Midjourney change saves a lot of time.
More usable artwork details on the web: Reusing prompts is more convenient
When you open a single piece on the Midjourney web interface, it’s usually easier to view generation information and reuse it for further creation. Many people making a series worry most about “forgetting how I wrote it back then.” Now, returning to the original image on the Midjourney site and pulling out the prompt structure to recombine it is cleaner than digging through long chat logs.
It’s recommended to organize your commonly used style descriptors, composition terms, and camera terms into your own “prompt snippets,” and reuse them by project in Midjourney. This way, the web interface isn’t just for viewing images—it helps you accumulate your prompt assets inside Midjourney.


