Vue - The Complete Guide (incl. Router & Composition API) vs API Design in Node.js
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
Vue - The Complete Guide (incl. Router & Composition API)
Frontend Masters · Web Development
API Design in Node.js
Per-criterion
At 32 hours across 402 lectures and 26 sections, this is one of the most comprehensive Vue courses available anywhere. Reviewers consistently note it covers everything from core directives and component communication through Vue Router, Vuex, Composition API, and three full-scale project builds. The course teaches both the Options API and the Composition API introduced with Vue 3 and has been updated to reflect Vue 3. The minor criticism from a small number of reviewers is that some earlier sections carry Vue 2 heritage and that Pinia — now the official state management recommendation — is not the focus, with Vuex still prominent in the core state management chapters.
Maximilian Schwarzmüller is the single most recommended Vue instructor on Reddit and Udemy alike. Reviewers praise his ability to dig into the underlying concepts behind Vue rather than just demonstrating surface syntax, describing the teaching style as "one of those courses that teaches you how to fish." His lectures are short (typically 2–3 minutes each), well-organised by chapter, and paced to avoid boredom. With 3.5 million+ students across his Udemy catalogue and over 244,000 enrolled in this course alone, his track record as an educator is unmatched in the Vue space on the platform.
The course lists at $189.99 but Udemy's frequent sales bring it to approximately $10–$15, making it arguably the best-value comprehensive Vue course available. Multiple Reddit reviewers specifically call out the Udemy sale price as a reason they chose it over Vue Mastery or Vue School subscriptions. Lifetime access means the investment compounds over time as the instructor pushes updates. The 30-day money-back guarantee removes purchase risk entirely.
Udemy's Q&A section for Maximilian's courses is active and well-maintained, with the instructor and teaching assistants responding to questions. Reviewers note the lectures themselves are organised well enough that revisiting specific chapters for refreshers works effectively. No significant complaints about support were found in the reviewed sources, though Udemy's community model is inherently less interactive than a cohort-based program.
The course builds three substantial projects — a "Monster Slayer" game, a "Learning Resource Manager" web app, and a "Find a Coach" full-featured app with authentication and data persistence — giving learners genuine hands-on exposure. One reviewer refactored a production project immediately after completing the course over a weekend. Reviewers who became front-end developers credit the course directly. The modest gap is that Pinia (Vue's current recommended state management) is not the course's primary focus — Vuex is — which means learners working on new Vue 3 projects need to supplement with Pinia documentation or a short add-on course.
The current version (v5) is a roughly 10-hour, end-to-end build of a production REST API: Express routing and middleware, a Postgres database with migrations, JWT-based authentication and authorisation, TypeScript throughout, runtime schema validation with Zod, error handling and integration testing with Vitest, finishing with a deploy to Render. Reviewers repeatedly describe it as "comprehensive" and as covering "all the important backend topics" in a single coherent project. The one structural criticism, raised by a workshop attendee, is that the database-choice discussion (SQL vs NoSQL) arrives later than it should, and a few exercises bleed code meant for later steps into earlier ones.
Scott Moss — a senior engineer at Netflix and a two-time Y Combinator founder — is the most consistently praised element across our entire sample. Learners describe him as explaining "each and every concept and line of code in an easy-to-understand and easy-to-follow way," and one blogger notes his "super relaxed, but brilliant mad scientist vibe that makes learning feel comfortable." A reviewer of his related Node.js course calls his teaching "engaging and informative, making complex topics accessible to learners of all levels." No reviewer in our sample criticises his clarity; the only instruction-adjacent note is occasional ambiguity about where an exercise is meant to stop.
The course is not standalone-purchasable: it is included in a Frontend Masters subscription (monthly or annual), which also unlocks the entire catalogue including Scott Moss's other Node, Next.js and AI courses. Reviewers who already subscribe treat this course as one of the highest-value backend titles on the platform; one blogger who tried 20+ backend courses lists it among his top recommendations. The subscription model means it is excellent value for active learners but poor value for someone who wants only this one ~10-hour course and nothing else — there is no one-time purchase option.
There is no graded feedback, peer review or instructor marking — this is a recorded workshop, not a cohort course. What learners get instead is a well-structured GitHub repository with per-lesson branches and exercise solutions, which several reviewers single out as excellent for "quick lookups" and for checking their work. In-person workshop attendees got live Q&A, but on-demand viewers do not. The exercise-scope ambiguity noted by one reviewer ("it was often a little unclear where we were supposed to stop") is the main friction point in the self-check loop.
This is the course's strongest dimension. The stack it teaches — Express, Postgres, JWT, TypeScript, Zod, Vitest, deploy to Render — maps directly onto what working backend teams actually ship in 2026, and one reviewer explicitly notes the API design patterns "apply to Java, Python, Go, Node.js and other backend technologies," not just Node. Multiple learners report feeling "more confident about building APIs" and "what I'm doing in Node.js and TypeScript" immediately afterward. The production-deployment ending is the part reviewers most often credit for closing the gap between tutorial code and shippable code.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.