Complete Intro to React v9 vs Full-Stack Engineer Career Path
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Frontend Masters · Web Development
Complete Intro to React v9
Codecademy (Pro) · Web Development
Full-Stack Engineer Career Path
Per-criterion
v9 covers React 18 and 19 features (form actions, Suspense, the React Compiler) plus a modern Vite + TanStack Router + TanStack Query stack. Praised for currency, with a minority of long-term Frontend Masters subscribers flagging that other courses in the catalog can drift.
Brian Holt is the most consistently praised aspect across nine years of Hacker News mentions. Learners use words like 'excellent', 'great', and 'brilliant'. His pet adoption project framing is repeatedly cited as memorable.
Requires a Frontend Masters subscription (currently $39/month), which is consistently described as worth it if you complete more than one course per month. Less competitive against free alternatives if you only want a single React intro.
The single build-along project (an e-commerce app in v9, evolved from the pet adoption app of earlier versions) is praised for being non-trivial and integrating real ecosystem tools (TanStack Query, Vitest) rather than toy examples.
Holt spends real time on tooling (Vite, ESLint, Prettier, code-splitting, Vitest) and modern ecosystem choices, which is the single most-cited reason people say his courses transferred well to their day jobs.
Curriculum covers HTML, CSS, JS, React, Redux, Node, Express, SQL, PostgreSQL, auth and deployment across roughly 250-450 hours. Wider scope than the Front-End path, but the backend modules draw more "feels mechanical" critiques than the well-scoped HTML/CSS opening.
Same curriculum-by-committee model as the Front-End path — clear early lessons, but no single voice carrying you through nine months of material. Backend modules in particular feel like a relay of authors rather than one instructor walking you up the stack.
$24/month over 6-9 months totals $150-$240, against The Odin Project (free, full-stack) and freeCodeCamp (free, multi-cert). Corpus calls it defensible for structure, hard to defend on content alone.
Two Pro-only capstone projects (a full-stack web app and a portfolio site) are the most cited reason to pay over the free tier. Mid-path builds remain praised as friction-removing but criticised as too guided to count as fully independent portfolio work.
Sandbox-only design helps front-end beginners but hurts the backend half — learners reach Node and Express without running a local server, env vars, or real deployment. Curriculum-to-production gap is the corpus's loudest reservation.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.