CourseVerdict

CSS Grid and Flexbox, v2 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

CSS Grid and Flexbox, v2

4.3/ 5 · 27 opinions
21 positive4 neutral2 negative/ 27 total

Codecademy (Pro) · Web Development

Full-Stack Engineer Career Path

3.7/ 5 · 42 opinions
25 positive11 neutral6 negative/ 42 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.4 / 5

Covers responsive layout across two parts — Flexbox (grid systems, navigation, responsive images) and CSS Grid (Mondrian and magazine layouts, cards). Reviewers say it teaches modern layout "without hacks", though v2 predates subgrid and container queries.

Instructor4.6 / 5

Jen Kramer is the most-praised element — a long-time CSS educator who explains layout clearly and at a beginner-friendly pace. Learners and a Hacker News commenter call her CSS courses "very good" and her teaching "well taught, in-depth".

Value for money4.1 / 5

Requires a $39/month (or $390/year) 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.

Projects4.0 / 5

More hands-on than most CSS courses: each section ends in build exercises and a capstone, including a Mondrian painting and magazine layouts. The builds are small practice pieces rather than a full portfolio site, but they reinforce the concepts well.

Real-world use4.3 / 5

Flexbox and Grid are the everyday tools for production layout, and learners report finishing real site layouts noticeably faster afterward. The main gap is currency — the newer features (subgrid, container queries) are covered in Kramer's v3, not this version.

Content quality3.5 / 5

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.

Instructor3.5 / 5

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.

Value for money3.2 / 5

$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.

Projects3.7 / 5

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.

Real-world use3.4 / 5

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.