Design for Developers vs Design a Mobile App
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 · Design
Design for Developers
Domestika · Design
Design a Mobile App
Per-criterion
Reviewers consistently praise the curriculum for distilling design theory (composition, color, typography, grids) into tight, first- principles lessons. The javarevisited round-up calls it the place "you start if you want to understand design principles deeply," though a few note the tooling segments (Sketch/Photoshop) now feel dated next to Figma.
Sarah Drasner's dual background as engineer and former scientific illustrator is the standout. Blog reviewers say she "perfectly selects the most important points" and "explains them in a style that keeps attention," and her Netlify/Microsoft/Google pedigree gives the design advice real credibility.
It is bundled in the Frontend Masters subscription rather than sold standalone, so value depends on whether you use the wider library. At 4h20m it is short, which some see as efficient and others see as surface-level for the price of a subscription.
The CodePen/CSS Grid exercises and primitive-shapes drills are well liked and the GitHub repo makes them easy to follow, but reviewers note there is no single capstone project — it is more guided exercises than a portfolio build.
Developers repeatedly report applying the layout, color and typography rules immediately in real projects and collaborating better with designers; the main caveat is that the tool-specific demos age faster than the timeless theory.
Seven units covering UX design thinking, wireframing and Sketch UI give a clear end-to-end pipeline. The empathise-ideate-design-test framework is solid and process-first. The Sketch dependency is the main structural weakness — Figma has become the industry standard for app design and Sketch-specific lessons age faster than tool-agnostic process content.
Christian Vizcarra's industry credentials are genuine — Awwwards, Behance and CSS Design Awards recognition; nine-plus years designing digital products for clients across Spain, Canada, the US, China and Brazil. Reviewers consistently describe him as clear, well-organised and easy to follow rather than theoretical.
Five hours of structured UX/UI content with 18 downloadable assets, a one-time lifetime-access model, and a frequent sale price around $10-15 makes the per-hour cost hard to beat. Reviewers who have paid for Coursera specializations or monthly subscription platforms consistently single out the Domestika one-time model as more honest for self-paced learners.
The final project is a genuine end-to-end brief — find a real personal problem, ideate a solution, wireframe on paper, UI-design in Sketch, and test. The real-problem anchor makes the project more motivated than a fictional exercise. Feedback is community-based rather than instructor-graded, which limits critique depth for learners who need expert direction on their specific work.
The UX design-thinking framework and the process of moving from problem to wireframe to visual UI transfer directly to real product work. Sketch proficiency, however, has diminishing returns in 2026 — most studios and product teams have migrated to Figma, and Windows users cannot install Sketch at all. Learners need to translate the tool-specific sections independently.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.