Midjourney has introduced a series of new changes to its platform. The highlight is an early version of V7, open for testing to the community. The company states this update arises from a new system design, giving images higher clarity and more coherent details.
V7 makes use of text prompts that produce even better results than before, and improved textures. The new design leads to images that match each user’s style more accurately.
David Holz, who is Midjourney’s CEO, says the alpha test is intended to gather feedback on how well the system adapts to different preferences. The company hopes to gain momentum once again through this new stage.
How Is Personalisation Handled?
One of the biggest draws of V7 is the personalisation feature. It triggers the first time the new model runs, guiding the user through a five-minute setup that influences how images appear later.
In earlier versions, folks needed to create around 200 images before the model understood their preferences. That process has been cut down to an interactive routine that feels more convenient.
The personalisation runs automatically, though users can switch it off if they decide they prefer standard settings. This flexible design allows people to tailor their output without guesswork or repeated trial.
Once everything is in place, personalisation stays active unless turned off. According to Midjourney, this helps produce visuals that fit each individual’s taste far more quickly than before.
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What Is Draft Mode?
Draft Mode stands out as a new option that speeds up image creation at a lower price. It can churn out results at around ten times the pace, making it appealing for quick brainstorming.
With Draft Mode active, a conversational setup on the web interface allows direct changes to prompts. A voice function is also available, letting a person speak aloud and watch the images evolve in real time.
If a user wishes to type a command instead, they can apply –draft at the end of a prompt. This triggers a fast pass that manipulates the text and spawns a quick image without a lengthy wait.
Draft Mode is built for early sketches. It trades top-tier resolution for speed but stays faithful to the core style. Users can then tap “upgrade” or “vary” to get the final product in full resolution.
Midjourney believes this method lowers costs for those who want rapid concept art. Although the images look simpler than standard outputs, they still maintain the same overall feel.
When Can People Get Involved?
Alpha testers are already experimenting with V7 on Midjourney’s Discord and web platform. The company encourages them to share results and ideas, so that any glitches can be ironed out early.
Two modes dubbed Turbo and Relax are also up for testing. Turbo costs double the credits of the regular V6 rate. Draft expenses are half.
Certain tools, like upscaling or texture adjustments, still switch back to older models for now. Midjourney plans to refine these soon, along with a possible new reference feature for characters and objects.