The Complete Web Developer: Zero to Mastery 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.
Udemy · Web Development
The Complete Web Developer: Zero to Mastery
Frontend Masters · Web Development
JavaScript: The Hard Parts, v2
Per-criterion
40 hours across 34 sections — HTML, CSS, JavaScript ES6+, React, Redux, Node.js, Express, PostgreSQL, and an ML capstone. Consistently updated; avoids jQuery and PHP in favour of current industry stack. Breadth is the key strength; depth per topic is intentionally beginner-level.
Andrei Neagoie holds a 4.7/5 average across 100K+ Udemy reviews. Reviewers cite clarity, pacing, and confidence-building for beginners. Former Shopify senior engineer background adds credibility. Q&A responsiveness is consistently positive.
Udemy sale price of $12–19 for 40 hours of full-stack content, 10+ projects, lifetime access, and Discord community is a strong value proposition. CourseFacts notes it is cheaper on Udemy than via the $19/month ZTM Academy subscription if you only want one or two courses.
10+ portfolio projects including a face-recognition Clarifai ML API app — the capstone most cited as interview-ready. Projects span front-end, back-end, and full-stack. Some reviewers note the projects feel more like guided challenges than independent builds.
Modern stack (React, Node, PostgreSQL, Git deployment) used by real companies. Multiple graduates report landing junior developer roles at major tech firms. Self-paced structure requires discipline; the course does not cover testing or DevOps, which employers increasingly expect.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.