The Odin Project — Full-Stack Curriculum vs The Web Developer Bootcamp 2024
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
The Odin Project · Web Development
The Odin Project — Full-Stack Curriculum
Udemy · Web Development
The Web Developer Bootcamp 2024
Per-criterion
The Odin Project — Full-Stack Curriculum
Reviewers consistently rate the curriculum as rigorous and in-depth, comparing it favourably to paid bootcamps. It covers the full stack — HTML/CSS, JavaScript, and either Ruby on Rails or Node.js — and is open-source and actively maintained. The most cited gap is the absence of data structures and algorithms (plus omissions like advanced CLI tooling, Tailwind and Sass), which learners note they must study elsewhere for technical interviews.
This is the honest weak spot by design. There are no instructors, lectures or formal classes — the curriculum curates external readings and videos and then sets projects. Strong, motivated learners thrive on it; others find the lack of personalised feedback or one-on-one mentoring hard. The score reflects that there is genuinely no teacher to lean on, not that the guidance is poor.
The Odin Project is completely free and open-source, with no paywall, ads or upsell. For a curriculum that reviewers compare to bootcamps costing thousands, the value is close to unbeatable. The only "cost" is the time and self-direction required to finish it.
The project-based model is the most praised feature. Rather than handing you solutions, Odin gives resources and asks you to build the thing yourself, which reviewers credit with pulling them out of "tutorial hell" and forcing real problem-solving. Learners finish with a genuine GitHub portfolio of working projects built largely without hand-holding.
The build-it-yourself projects produce exactly the portfolio and independent-debugging habits employers value, and many learners report becoming job-ready. The caveats: there is no job placement or guaranteed support beyond basic preparation, no certificate, and the DSA gap means you'll need supplementary study before technical interviews.
The Web Developer Bootcamp 2024
Broad full-stack scope (HTML, CSS, JS, DOM, Node, Express, MongoDB) that shows beginners the whole shape of a web app. One recurring 2024 critique flags Udemy paid courses for "low effort updates" vs MDN or Odin.
Strongest criterion. Long-time HN users name Colt their "favorite web dev teacher" and credit his in-person classroom background. Signature move is walking students directly into mistakes then guiding them out.
Listed near $200 but routinely buyable for $10-$20 in Udemy sales — a price every commenter we tracked considers a giveaway given the runtime and lifetime access. The standard advice is to clear cookies, use incognito, and never pay sticker.
The build-along YelpCamp full-stack project (Express + MongoDB + authentication + image uploads) is the most-cited reason people finish the course feeling they built something real. Smaller mid- course exercises are praised as friction-removing but less portfolio-defensible.
Strong fundamentals on HTML, CSS, vanilla JS and a basic Node/Express/Mongo stack that transfers to most web roles. Weaker on modern tooling, TypeScript and React — most learners take a follow-up framework course to close the gap to a 2026 front-end job.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.