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HomeTips & TricksGeminiMidjourney Web App Updates: A Faster Workflow Beyond Discord for Browsing and Generating Images

Midjourney Web App Updates: A Faster Workflow Beyond Discord for Browsing and Generating Images

3/23/2026
Gemini

The most practical change in Midjourney’s latest update is that the main hub for “finding images, viewing images, and refining images” is steadily moving to the website. For anyone who doesn’t want to live inside Discord channels, the new web features make the workflow smoother: from organizing your work and fast browsing to starting generations and reviewing history—everything is more centralized and more intuitive. Below, based on real usage, we’ll break down what these Midjourney features improve.

The website becomes the main entry point: log in and authorize to start managing your work

To use the Midjourney web app, you still need to sign in via Discord authorization: go to midjourney.com/login and follow the prompts to authorize your account. After you successfully log in, you’ll see a clearer entry to your work inside the site (often a personal gallery like “My Images”).

For content creators, this matters because you no longer have to dig through Discord’s message stream to find past results. Midjourney generations can now be stored in a gallery view on the website, making it easier to review prompts later and download final outputs.

Lightning-fast scroll browsing: a major boost for batch image review

The website’s “scroll browsing” is an easy-to-underrate Midjourney feature. Once you open your personal gallery, click any image to enter the viewer, then use your mouse wheel to jump to the previous/next image—very quickly.

This Midjourney feature is especially useful for series work: you can review dozens of outputs around the same theme in a short time, quickly flagging the versions worth upscaling, instead of opening items one by one in Discord and waiting for them to load.

From Discord to a web-first workflow: clearer records, easier review

You can still generate images in Discord with /imagine, but the web app emphasizes a more “work-centered” workflow: you manage and review in your library first, then decide whether to upscale or iterate further. For designers who deliver assets, this structure is closer to real project-style asset management.

If you need the subscription entry point, you can still type /subscribe in Discord to open the subscription page. After subscribing, Midjourney’s website features become more valuable in a high-frequency workflow (for example, more reliably organizing assets and comparing versions).

How to use these Midjourney web features to improve results: a simple, practical flow

It helps to standardize “generate—select—iterate” into three simple steps: start a generation in Discord or on the web; return to the website and use scroll browsing to quickly remove weak versions; then upscale or iterate only on the best 2–3 images. This workflow can significantly reduce wasted effort.

Once you begin building up your work on the website, the real value of these Midjourney features becomes more obvious: you’re not just generating images—you’re also building a reusable library of prompts and style assets, which makes similar requests much faster next time.