Adobe Photoshop CC – Essentials Training Course vs User Experience Design Essentials - Adobe XD UI UX Design
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 (Daniel Walter Scott) · Design
Adobe Photoshop CC – Essentials Training Course
Udemy · Design
User Experience Design Essentials - Adobe XD UI UX Design
Per-criterion
The course covers the full beginner Photoshop toolkit — layers, selections, masking, retouching, blend modes, type, filters, smart objects and export across roughly 10–12 hours and around 88–93 lessons. Students consistently describe it as well-structured from easy to hard with no padding and "detailed explanations and really fun practical tasks." The ceiling is that the recordings predate Photoshop's newest AI features (Generative Fill, updated Select Subject) and some panels have moved, which is a recurrent minor frustration across reviews.
Daniel Walter Scott is an Adobe Certified Instructor and Adobe Certified Expert and an Adobe Max speaker with 15-plus years of teaching experience. He is the single most-cited reason students recommend this course — reviewers repeatedly call him clear, funny, patient and genuinely passionate. One reviewer who had taken over 50 Udemy courses called him "the best of best on my list," and Learnopoly names him "one of the best Photoshop tutors out there." The instructor dimension is the strongest asset of the course.
The effective Udemy sale price of roughly $15–19 (the list price of $100+ is rarely paid) gives learners 10-plus hours of video, around 20 guided projects, downloadable exercise files, lifetime access and free updates. At that price it is among the strongest value-per-hour beginner design courses on any platform. The same content is also available on Skillshare and CreativeLive under different pricing models, giving flexibility on cost.
Multiple reviewers note that Daniel Walter Scott responds to Q&A questions within a day and "obviously cares about what his students think." Students describe the Udemy Q&A section as active and useful for resolving confusion around panel changes between Photoshop versions. The main limitation is that support is asynchronous Q&A only — there is no live cohort, office hours or community forum beyond Udemy's native Q&A system.
The course teaches the everyday Photoshop workflow a junior designer or photo editor actually uses — non-destructive masking, layer discipline, retouching, export for web and print. Reviewers who came in with zero experience describe finishing with "a solid start to building a portfolio." The ceiling is scope: this is a foundations course, not advanced compositing, colour grading or production-pipeline depth, and newer generative AI tooling is absent.
A genuinely comprehensive ~12-hour beginner UX/UI curriculum — UX vs UI, low- and high-fidelity wireframes, prototyping, components and repeat grids, micro-interactions, user testing and developer hand-off. Reviewers describe it as thorough and well-sequenced. The cap is structural: every lesson is built on Adobe XD, a tool Adobe placed into maintenance mode in 2023, so a chunk of the screen-specific content is now legacy knowledge.
Daniel Walter Scott is an Adobe Certified Instructor and Adobe Max speaker, and across thousands of reviews he is the single most-cited reason to take the course — clear, passionate, funny, and good at reinforcing concepts. A minority find the humour and pacing distracting, but the instructor signal is overwhelmingly positive and consistent with his other courses.
At the typical Udemy sale price (~$13-20, the effective price almost everyone pays) the teaching quality is excellent value. The discount is that you are paying to learn a discontinued tool — the XD-specific skills no longer compound, so the value-per-dollar is lower than the same instructor's Figma course at the same price.
Learners build real, portfolio-shaped deliverables — a mobile app and a website mockup with working prototypes — rather than isolated drills, and reviewers say they finish with confidence and tangible work. The artefacts are tied to XD's prototype format, which limits how shareable they are in a Figma-dominant hiring market.
The transferable UX thinking — wireframing, components, prototyping logic, client briefing, dev hand-off — is real and survives the tool change. But the tool itself does not: Adobe XD is no longer sold standalone or actively developed, and the industry has consolidated on Figma. That gap is the main drag on day-one job applicability for new designers.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.