CourseVerdict

Full Stack for Front-End Engineers, v3 vs Front-End 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

Full Stack for Front-End Engineers, v3

4.3/ 5 · 30 opinions
22 positive6 neutral2 negative/ 30 total

Codecademy (Pro) · Web Development

Front-End Engineer Career Path

3.9/ 5 · 42 opinions
28 positive9 neutral5 negative/ 42 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.5 / 5

Across roughly 8 hours, the course covers the parts of full-stack work front-end devs usually skip — the command line, VPS setup, DNS, Nginx, SSH, firewalls, HTTPS/TLS, WebSockets, CI/CD and Docker. Reviewers repeatedly praise the breadth and how it covers "usually ignored parts" of the path without overwhelming.

Instructor4.6 / 5

Jem Young (Engineering Manager at Netflix) is consistently described as clear, fun to watch, and good at making infrastructure concepts accessible. The Netflix war stories sprinkled throughout are a recurring highlight. Delivery is the most-praised element after breadth.

Value for money4.1 / 5

Requires a Frontend Masters subscription (~$39/month, ~$390/year) rather than a one-time purchase. Strong value if you use the wider catalog, weaker if you only want this one course. Reviewers call the membership pricey but generally justified by the production quality.

Projects3.9 / 5

You build and deploy a real working application on a live VPS end to end — a genuine, portfolio-relevant artefact rather than a toy. The catch is that infrastructure you provision (a paid Droplet, a domain) costs real money to follow along, and the build is breadth-first rather than a polished product.

Real-world use4.5 / 5

This is the course's strongest dimension. The skills — provisioning a server, configuring Nginx, setting up CI/CD, containerising with Docker, hardening with a firewall and TLS — map directly to production tasks front-end engineers hit the moment they own deployment.

Content quality3.7 / 5

Curriculum covers HTML, CSS, vanilla JS, React, Redux and a capstone project across roughly 100 hours. Well-scoped for beginners but several long-time learners report content drift in framework modules and a pacing that prioritises bite-sized exercises over deep explanation.

Instructor3.6 / 5

No single instructor — the path is curriculum-by-committee, mixing written lessons with short videos. Praised for clarity in the early HTML/CSS units; later JS and React modules draw recurring criticism that they "feel like following instructions" rather than teaching.

Value for money3.4 / 5

Career Path requires Pro at $24/mo (~$240/year). Head-to-head with freeCodeCamp (free, similar scope), the value math is the corpus's most-debated point. Justifiable mainly for the structured path plus capstone, not the lessons alone.

Projects3.8 / 5

The Pro-only capstone is the single most-cited reason to recommend the Career Path over the free modules. Mid-path mini-projects are praised as friction-removing but criticised as too guided to count as independent portfolio work.

Real-world use3.5 / 5

Strong on language syntax and React 101 patterns; weaker on local dev environment, git workflow, deployment and modern build tooling. Several commenters describe the same "I can write a for loop, now what?" gap after finishing the early modules — a sandbox-first design trade-off.

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