Midjourney’s recent changes aren’t as simple as “just another button”—they’ve moved more of the creative workflow onto the website. The revamped Midjourney site strengthens image browsing, organizing, and sharing, so you no longer have to stay in Discord channels searching for images and scrolling through logs. Below, following the actual usage flow, I’ll explain these new features clearly.
The most obvious change on the new site: scrolling through feels more like viewing a gallery
In My Images on the Midjourney website, open any image and you can use the mouse wheel to quickly browse through works continuously. This experience is much smoother than flipping through chat history one message at a time. While browsing, you can directly land on the image you want and then take follow-up actions—without repeatedly going back to Discord to search messages.
If you generate a large volume of images, this “scroll-to-browse” improvement will be very noticeable: selecting, comparing, and revisiting works from the same series becomes much more efficient. For Midjourney, this is essentially making “post-creation organization” part of the product.
More centralized work management: from finding images to saving, all in one flow
The new Midjourney website lets your work accumulate in a personal gallery, which is better suited for long-term organization. You can keep commonly used reference images and phased concepts together in My Images for unified review, reducing the awkward “the image is in the channel but I can’t find it anymore” moments.
For people who need to report progress or deliver work frequently, centralized management on the Midjourney website is more convenient than having everything scattered across Discord: you can filter, compare, and pick the version to send to a client directly in the web interface.
