Midjourney Discontinues Rooms Feature to Rebuild Specialized Tools
- •Midjourney removes experimental Rooms feature to address infrastructure and scaling limitations.
- •Company admits feature attempted to solve too many problems without reaching necessary quality standards.
- •Users redirected to Discord and support pages while specialized collaboration tools are developed.
Midjourney has announced the removal of its "Rooms" feature from its web platform, marking the end of an experimental phase focused on community interaction and live collaboration. While the feature was intended to provide a unified space for users to create and communicate, the company admitted that the current infrastructure struggled to support the feature's broad ambitions effectively.
The decision reflects a strategic shift toward quality over quantity, as Midjourney leadership noted that Rooms attempted to bridge too many gaps simultaneously without mastering any specific functionality. Rather than continuing to apply patches to a system that wasn't designed for global scale, the team is opting to clear the slate to build more robust, specialized experiences for support and live events.
For the university student following AI product cycles, this move highlights a common challenge in the industry: the difficulty of scaling synchronous (real-time) social features alongside resource-intensive generative tools. Building a space where multiple users can generate high-resolution images while chatting requires significant backend power and a specialized user interface that avoids cluttering the core experience.
Until new dedicated products are released, the community is encouraged to return to the support and promptcraft channels on Discord. This transition emphasizes Midjourney’s ongoing reliance on third-party community platforms while they refine their internal web-based ecosystem for future collaborative systems.