Launched this week
Not another AI image tool. Miora is an Agentic Creative Studio with Memory. Bring one idea, generate multimodal assets on one editable canvas, turn auto-built memory into a reusable Skill, then create more, always true to your taste. One person, a whole creative studio.










Many tools can generate variations. Fewer can remember why a direction was approved and carry it into another medium
Miora
@jody_l_wyatt That's exactly the problem we're interested in. Generating options is getting easier fast. Remembering why a decision was made feels much harder and much more valuable.
Miora
@jody_l_wyatt Totally agree. The hard part isn't creating more options, it's maintaining creative consistency and delivering reliable, aligned outputs over time. That's something we've been thinking deeply about, and it's the kind of creative memory we're building with Miora.
Miora
@jody_l_wyatt Spot on, Jody! You’ve highlighted exactly why the traditional linear chat interface often fails real creative work. When you try to iterate inside a chat box, the AI tends to get stuck in a rut, getting progressively worse as you give it more feedback, and you can't even roll back to a previous good version. That’s why we built Miora on an infinite canvas—it lets you freely branch, compare, and merge different nodes. When you finally approve a specific direction, our memory layer captures the exact WHY behind your choice, acting as a stable anchor that carries that approved style seamlessly into other mediums like video or UI without losing the essence along the way.
Miora
@jody_l_wyatt Exactly. The goal isn’t just more variations, but carrying the approved intent across mediums. That’s where memory becomes really useful.
Miora
@jody_l_wyatt Memory is just the one of many exciting features coming to Miora. We’re rethinking creative generation around a true Agent, with the goal of transforming how people create while dramatically lowering the barrier to entry. Much more is coming.
Love the direction you're taking . The idea of AI remembering my creative preferences instead of starting from zero every session feels like a much bigger leap than just generating another image.
Miora
@felix_harper That's the shift we're excited about too.
For a lot of creative work, the real cost isn't generating the asset. It's re-explaining the context, preferences, and decisions every single time.
We're hoping Miora can become something that grows alongside the creator, instead of resetting back to zero every session.
Miora
@felix_harper Exactly. The goal is for Miora to build on what you have already made and decided, instead of making you repeat your taste, references, and constraints every time. like a teammate
Miora
@felix_harper btw
That has been one of the strongest reactions from our beta users: after working with Miora’s Agent for a while, they do not want to go back to one-shot generation tools that make them start over every time.
Miora
@felix_harper AND memory is just the one of many exciting features coming to Miora. We’re rethinking creative generation around a true Agent, with the goal of transforming how people create while dramatically lowering the barrier to entry. Much more is coming.
KnowU
Congrats on the launch. I would start with a deliberately difficult brief involving one character across illustration, UI, motion, and 3D to see how well the memory carries the identity.
Miora
@carlvert Haha that's exactly the kind of brief we'd want people to throw at it. Curious what you'd think after trying it.
Miora
@carlvert Thanks! That’s actually a great stress test. Keeping one character’s identity consistent across illustration, UI, motion, and 3D is exactly the kind of challenge we want to tackle. Would love to see what you create with it!
How do you plan to handle copyright and ownership issues with user-generated assets and skills created on Miora's platform?
Miora
@aymnart Great question. Our principle is simple: users should own the assets they create and control the Skills they build.
Skills in Miora are treated like user-created creative systems: prompts, rules, references, brand guidelines, memory, and workflow logic. They’re private by default, and users should decide whether to reuse, share, export, or delete them.
For copyright, we’re working on clear ownership terms, reference controls, provenance where possible, and safeguards against intentionally copying protected assets or characters.
Miora
@aymnart This is a fantastic and crucial question, Aymen. Our stance is very straightforward: you own what you create. Any visual assets you generate and any custom skills or memory rules you build on Miora belong entirely to you. We know that for agencies and studios, IP is everything. We do not claim ownership over your proprietary brand guidelines, nor do we use your private workspace data or specific anchor nodes to train our models. While global copyright laws regarding AI are still evolving, Miora is built from the ground up to be a secure environment that gives you full commercial rights and complete ownership over your specific creative workflows.
Invoko
Creative consistency is usually lost in the handoffs: key visual to motion, motion to social, social to product UI. Putting those assets on one canvas with shared memory could remove a lot of repeated explanation.
Miora
@mingyouagi Exactly, and it is more than putting the assets on one canvas. Miora’s agent sees the work in one shared context, so it can follow the connection from a key visual to motion, social, and UI without making you re-explain the brief every time.
Project memory carries the important context across new conversations too, such as your logo, brand rules, and key decisions. That continuity is where the handoffs start to feel much less painful.
Miora
@mingyouagi and memory is just the one of many exciting features coming to Miora. We’re rethinking creative generation around a true Agent, with the goal of transforming how people create while dramatically lowering the barrier to entry. Much more is coming.
when you share a Skill with a teammate, does the anchor/memory baked into it travel with it, or does it need re-anchoring against their own account's memory first?
Miora
@sabber_ahamed That is a great technical question! To clarify, a Skill in Miora operates much like skills in other AI agent products—it is completely stateless. The baked memory and specific anchor nodes do not travel with it. Instead, a Skill is designed to summarize your process and capture your workflow, essentially acting as a SOP. When you share it with a teammate, you are sharing the exact recipe, which they will then apply to their own specific anchors and canvas memory.
@ziofat that's a clean way to frame it, recipe not the data. does the teammate get any signal for how close their re-anchored version lands to your original intent, or is that entirely on them to judge?
Miora
@sabber_ahamed Right now, there isn't an automated similarity score or a rigid system signal that grades their output against your original intent. Because they are applying your recipe to their own unique anchors, "intent" becomes highly contextual. We believe that visual judgment on the open canvas is still the most reliable way to gauge that. They run the recipe, see the results side-by-side with their references, and use their own creative eye for that final alignment.
Miora
@ziofat @sabber_ahamed Miora is an agent, so it does more than hand over a recipe and leave the judgment to your teammate. It can compare their new anchors against the Skill’s original intent, point out where it sees drift, and talk through whether that shift is intentional or needs to be corrected.
The shared Skill carries the recipe and its criteria, while each person’s own context stays private. Curious how you’d want this to work in practice. Any ideas?
the anchor-node consistency answer is genuinely thoughtful. more of a business-model question: a full multimodal campaign pack (script, storyboard, video, UI, 3D) across several specialist agents sounds credit-heavy. does the 1,000 free credits cover one real end-to-end campaign, or is that more of a taste-test amount before you hit a paywall mid-project?
Miora
@galdayan Great question.
The goal isn't to get creators halfway through a project and then surprise them with a paywall.
How far 1,000 credits goes depends a lot on the workflow. A quick visual exploration uses very little, while a full multimodal campaign naturally consumes more.
But our intention is that people can experience a real end-to-end creative workflow, not just a taste test of one
@sherina_chen fair enough, I know that's a hard number to promise upfront since every brief is different. guess I'll just have to burn through the credits myself and see where it actually lands.