CourseVerdict

Vue 3 Fundamentals vs JavaScript: The Hard Parts, v2

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

Vue 3 Fundamentals

4.3/ 5 · 28 opinions
22 positive4 neutral2 negative/ 28 total

Frontend Masters · Web Development

JavaScript: The Hard Parts, v2

4.4/ 5 · 26 opinions
20 positive4 neutral2 negative/ 26 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.5 / 5

Seven hours covering Vue components, directives, lifecycle hooks, slots, Composition API (ref, reactive, computed, composables), Vue Router, Pinia, and production deployment — a genuinely complete introduction to the modern Vue 3 stack. The workshop was published January 2023, updated for Pinia replacing Vuex, and reviewers note it reflects the current "Vue philosophy" rather than just syntax. Minor gap: TypeScript is not covered (there is a separate Ben Hong course for that), so learners who want TS from day one need to pair it with a second course.

Instructor4.7 / 5

Ben Hong is a Vue.js Core Team member and Senior Staff DX Engineer at Netlify, and his insider knowledge shapes the course throughout. Reviewers consistently praise the "learn, question, apply" workshop structure and his ability to explain the reasoning behind Vue's design choices, not just the mechanics. One blog reviewer wrote that "Ben makes Vue feel intuitive — you won't just learn syntax, you'll understand Vue philosophy." The minority critique is that he moves methodically, which some learners with React backgrounds find slow relative to their existing framework knowledge.

Value for money4.0 / 5

Requires a Frontend Masters subscription (~$39/month or ~$390/year) rather than a one-time purchase. Strong value if you plan to take several Frontend Masters courses (the Vue learning path alone spans fundamentals, intermediate, TypeScript + Vue, Nuxt, and a production-grade Vue course). Weak value if you only want this one course. No free tier — the subscription gates all content.

Projects3.9 / 5

Students build a real application across the workshop, integrating Vue Router and Pinia into a working project. Reviewers credit it for building "muscle memory" around the Vue ecosystem tools. It is a coherent hands-on build, though it is not the portfolio-heavyweight kind of project (no backend, no auth, no deployment beyond a basic Netlify drop). Learners wanting a production-scale Vue project will need Ben Hong's follow-on "Production-Grade Vue.js" course.

Real-world use4.3 / 5

The workshop covers Vite (the modern build tool), Pinia (the current official state management recommendation, replacing Vuex), and Vue Router — the actual stack used in production Vue 3 apps in 2026. Reviewers coming from Vue 2 specifically call out the Options-to-Composition API comparison as immediately applicable for migration work. TypeScript and testing are the two notable gaps relative to a full production workflow.

Content quality4.7 / 5

Goes deep on the JavaScript runtime model — thread of execution, the call stack, closure, the event loop, Promises and prototypes/classes — across roughly 6.5 hours. Reviewers consistently say it explains how JavaScript works "under the hood" rather than just syntax.

Instructor4.8 / 5

Will Sentance (Codesmith founder) is the most-praised element. Learners cite his blackboard diagrams, the "backpack" analogy for closure, and a Socratic, audience-paced delivery. The same intense, repetitive style is the one thing a minority find tiring.

Value for money4.1 / 5

Requires a $39/month Frontend Masters subscription rather than a one-time purchase — strong value if you use the wider catalog, weaker if you only want this one course. The course is included in the standard subscription.

Projects3.6 / 5

This is a conceptual, exercise-and-whiteboard course, not a project build. There is no portfolio-worthy capstone, which some learners miss. The exercises are effective for drilling mental models but produce no artefact.

Real-world use4.4 / 5

The mental models — call stack, closure, the event loop, async behaviour — directly explain bugs developers hit daily. Experienced developers report the course clarified concepts they had used for years without fully understanding.

Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.