The AI image generator that turned prompt engineering into an art form
Midjourney changed what people expect from AI-generated images. While competitors were producing obvious AI artifacts and mangled hands, Midjourney V6 started outputting photorealistic portraits and painterly compositions that fooled professional photographers. It remains the gold standard for aesthetic quality in 2026, especially for concept art, editorial illustration, and creative direction. The workflow is unusual — you generate images through Discord bot commands or the newer web interface at midjourney.com. Type a prompt, get four variations in about 60 seconds. Upscale your favorite, remix it, or pan and zoom to extend the canvas. The learning curve is the prompt syntax: aspect ratios (--ar 16:9), stylization levels (--s 750), and chaos parameters (--c 50) give you granular control once you learn them. Pricing is straightforward but not cheap. Basic at $10/month gives you roughly 200 images with 3.3 hours of fast GPU time. Standard at $30/month bumps that to 15 hours of fast time plus unlimited relaxed generations — this is where most serious users land. Pro at $60/month and Mega at $120/month add stealth mode (private generations) and more fast hours. Annual billing knocks 20% off every tier. There is no free plan. The V6.1 model handles text in images surprisingly well — not perfect, but readable signs and logos are now possible without Photoshop cleanup. Inpainting and outpainting through the web editor let you fix specific regions without regenerating the entire image. The style reference feature (--sref) lets you feed a reference image to match its aesthetic, which is a lifesaver for maintaining visual consistency across a project. The biggest limitation is control. You're describing what you want, not placing elements precisely. For layout-specific work — UI mockups, exact product shots, technical diagrams — you'll hit a wall. Midjourney excels at creative exploration, mood boards, and hero imagery, but it's not a replacement for Photoshop or Figma when precision matters.