1 |
–aspect / –ar |
Change the aspect ratio of a generation. |
2 |
–chaos |
Change how varied the results will be (0–100). Higher values produce more unusual and unexpected generations. |
3 |
–fast |
Override current settings and run a single job using Fast Mode. |
4 |
–iw |
Sets image prompt weight relative to text weight (0–2). Default is 1. |
5 |
–no |
Negative prompting, e.g., –no plants, attempts to remove specified elements from the image. |
6 |
–quality / –q |
Determine rendering quality time (0.25, 0.5, or 1). Default is 1. |
7 |
–style random |
Add a random 32 base styles Style Tuner code to your prompt. |
8 |
–relax |
Override current settings and run a single job using Relax Mode. |
9 |
–repeat / –r |
Create multiple jobs from a single prompt (1–40). Useful for quickly rerunning a job multiple times. |
10 |
–seed |
The seed number generates visual noise for the initial image grids (0–4294967295). Using the same seed produces similar images. |
11 |
–stop |
Use the –stop parameter to finish a job partway through the process (10–100). |
12 |
–style |
Switch between Midjourney Model Versions and Niji Model Versions. Use /tune command to create Style Tuner codes. |
13 |
–stylize / –s |
Influences how strongly Midjourney’s default aesthetic style is applied to jobs. |
14 |
–tile |
Generates images suitable for repeating tiles to create seamless patterns. |
15 |
–turbo |
Override current settings and run a single job using Turbo Mode. |
16 |
–weird / –w |
Explore unusual aesthetics with the experimental –weird parameter (0–3000). |
17 |
–niji |
Switch to an alternative model focused on anime-style images (4 or 5). |
18 |
–version / –v |
Use a different version of the Midjourney algorithm (1, 2, 3, 4, 5.0, 5.1, 5.2, or 6). |