Complete Intro to React, v9 vs freeCodeCamp Data Visualization Certification
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
freeCodeCamp · Web Development
freeCodeCamp Data Visualization Certification
Per-criterion
Complete Intro to React, v9
The course covers React 19 from initial project scaffolding with Vite through hooks (useState, useEffect, useContext, useReducer), component composition, routing with TanStack Router, and performance patterns — all organized around building a production- style e-commerce application rather than isolated toy examples. Reviewers consistently praise the modern toolchain (no Create React App), the focus on current patterns that actually work in production codebases, and the absence of outdated class-component material. The v9 designation signals genuine curriculum updates rather than cosmetic refreshes, which is rare among multi-version React courses.
Brian Holt is described across all reviewed sources as an exceptional teacher — specifically praised for making complex concepts feel obvious through clear analogies, methodical build-up, and a conversational delivery that stays engaging across eight hours of video. Multiple reviewers note that experienced React developers still learn meaningful things from Holt's explanations, suggesting depth beyond what the beginner framing implies. He is repeatedly described as a GEM among Frontend Masters instructors.
The course requires a Frontend Masters subscription ($39/month or $390/year), which gives access to the full course catalogue of 200+ expert-level courses — not a single-course purchase. For developers who intend to use more than a few courses, the subscription offers strong value. For learners who only want this one course, the subscription model is a higher upfront cost than a typical Udemy purchase. Frontend Masters does not offer a permanent free tier, though the course notes and exercises are publicly accessible at react-v9.holt.courses.
The e-commerce project format means learners build a real application rather than disconnected code snippets, and the toolchain — Vite, ESLint, Prettier, TanStack — mirrors what professional React teams actually use. Reviewers who moved directly from the course to their first React role or freelance project report that the patterns transferred immediately. The course avoids outdated approaches that would confuse learners encountering a modern codebase, which sets it apart from older React curricula still teaching class components as the primary pattern.
Building a complete e-commerce application — covering product listings, a shopping cart, routing, and state management — gives learners a deployable project and a portfolio piece, not just completed exercises. Reviewers highlight that the project scope is substantial enough to demonstrate real React understanding without being overwhelming. The course's companion notes at react-v9.holt.courses also let learners self-pace the text-based curriculum independently of the video playback speed.
freeCodeCamp Data Visualization Certification
The certification bundles two distinct topics: a JSON APIs and AJAX module that learners consistently rate as practical and worth keeping, and a D3.js block that draws the corpus's sharpest criticism. The recurring complaint is that the D3 lessons feel rushed and skip the conceptual scaffolding learners actually need — scales in particular are called out repeatedly as under-explained, which then bites hard during the certification projects. One learner who revisited the section four separate times concluded "I think I don't understand D3. Seriously." The bright spot is that the curriculum is being actively revamped, and the five capstone projects are genuinely well-designed real builds rather than fill-in-the-blank exercises.
There is no single instructor — the curriculum is a community-built, interactive lesson sequence with no live teaching, no graded feedback, and no mentor. This is the format's core trade-off: the bite-sized D3 challenges teach syntax in isolation but, as multiple learners note, provide "no real practise to what is being tought," leaving a gap between completing lessons and building a project unaided. Several reviewers explicitly recommend bolting on Curran Kelleher's free 17-hour D3 video course to fill that gap, with one calling it "the only course I've taken that has given me a good grasp of d3." The interactive curriculum gets the credit for being free and structured; it loses points for thin conceptual depth and zero personalised feedback.
The entire certification is free, forever, with no paywall, no trial, and no upsell. Even reviewers who are lukewarm on D3's career value concede the price makes the trade-offs easy to accept — you risk only your time. The JSON/AJAX module alone is widely judged worth doing on its own merits, and the five projects are portfolio-ready. The only thing tempering a perfect score is opportunity cost: with D3 appearing in a tiny share of job postings, time-constrained learners may get more career mileage from another free freeCodeCamp certification.
Support is entirely community-driven through the freeCodeCamp forum, where learners post projects for peer code review and get genuinely helpful responses. There is no official mentorship, no instructor office hours, and no job-placement assistance — reviewers note the platform "does not offer much career direction or oversight." The autograding test suite on the projects is a double-edged tool: it gives instant pass/fail feedback, but learners regularly hit cryptic failures (cells not aligning to axes, scale-definition mistakes) and have to reverse-engineer what the hidden tests want. Self-discipline is mandatory; nobody is checking on you.
Two sides here. The JSON APIs and AJAX skills and the practice of reading unfamiliar library documentation transfer directly to everyday web development — multiple learners single these out as the real takeaway. D3 itself is a genuinely niche skill: reviewers who searched their local markets found roughly 5-10 D3 postings against 1,200 general developer roles, and one learner reported professional developers telling them D3 "is not used or needed." The projects do build a real portfolio artifact and the muscle of building from a spec with no tutorial, which is valuable regardless of whether you ever touch D3 again.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.