CourseVerdict

Vue - The Complete Guide (incl. Router & Composition API) vs Web Performance Fundamentals, 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

Vue - The Complete Guide (incl. Router & Composition API)

4.6/ 5 · 34 opinions
27 positive5 neutral2 negative/ 34 total

Frontend Masters · Web Development

Web Performance Fundamentals, v2

4.7/ 5 · 24 opinions
21 positive2 neutral1 negative/ 24 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.7 / 5

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.

Instructor4.8 / 5

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.

Value for money4.8 / 5

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.

Projects4.0 / 5

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.

Real-world use4.4 / 5

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.

Content quality4.8 / 5

The course covers the full stack of modern web performance knowledge in approximately six hours — a tight, well-curated curriculum that avoids the padding common in longer Udemy-style recordings. It opens with the psychology of perceived performance (drawing on David Maister's "Psychology of Waiting Lines"), then moves through Core Web Vitals metrics (LCP, CLS, and INP, which replaced FID as an official Google signal in March 2024), measurement APIs, synthetic testing with Lighthouse and WebPageTest, Real User Monitoring with CrUX, and finally concrete optimization tactics for each metric — TTFB, FCP, LCP, layout shift prevention, and interaction latency. The October 2024 update brought the curriculum fully current with the INP transition, so learners are not working with obsolete tooling or metrics. What sets the content apart from generic performance tutorials is its insistence on real user data before optimization. The recurring lesson — "focus on your worst metric, fix the most basic thing first, and confirm with RUM" — is a workflow, not just a collection of tips. The course also links performance work directly to business outcomes: conversion rate, SEO rankings, and user retention statistics are woven into the justification throughout, which gives engineers the language they need to advocate for performance work with non-technical stakeholders. The GitHub workshop repository (113 stars, 87 forks as of mid-2026) demonstrates the exercises have genuine uptake in the developer community.

Instructor4.9 / 5

Todd Gardner is one of the most credentialed practitioners teaching web performance in any format. As co-founder of TrackJS and Request Metrics, he has spent years building commercial RUM tools and working directly with thousands of development teams on performance problems — a background that produces very different teaching than a course built purely from documentation. His Frontend Masters blog articles (published November 2024 on INP and February 2025 on image optimization) extend the same practical, measurement-first methodology into the broader developer community. Student feedback collected from the official course page is unusually consistent in citing his teaching clarity as a differentiator. Anurag Bhandari wrote "Wonderfully planned and executed. Such a heavy topic explained in such simple terms." Pedro Antônio Pereira called it "a masterclass in how to understand web performance." Ryan Davidson, recommending it broadly, wrote: "Great blend of breadth and depth in the performance space. All web engineers — backend or frontend, junior or senior — should be taking this course!" The breadth of that recommendation — extending to backend engineers — reflects how Gardner anchors the course in concepts (HTTP caching, server response times, rendering pipelines) that apply regardless of whether you write CSS or database queries.

Value for money4.5 / 5

The course is included in a Frontend Masters subscription, priced at approximately $39/month or $390/year (annual plans have carried a 17-20% discount in 2025-2026). A seven-day free trial is available. For a subscriber who accesses even two or three courses, the per-course cost is minimal, and the Web Performance Fundamentals course is among the most immediately actionable in the entire library — the techniques taught apply to any existing project without needing to rebuild or refactor an architecture. Deeptiman Mallick's testimonial captures the evergreen value: "This course is like a bookmark to come back to when we're working on performance." Unlike courses that you complete once and set aside, the performance metrics and tools taught here — Lighthouse, WebPageTest, CrUX — are ones practitioners return to on every new project or optimization sprint. The value proposition is strongest for working developers with a real codebase to optimize; the course is less compelling as a purely theoretical exercise for learners with no project to apply it to. There is no standalone purchase option, so non-subscribers must commit to at least one month of the full subscription.

Projects4.2 / 5

The hands-on component uses a real Node.js + Express e-commerce project — "Developer Stickers Online" — which is deployed to multiple regions and available on a global CDN with HTTP/3 support, making it possible to test real network conditions rather than synthetic localhost scenarios. Students work with actual Lighthouse scores, WebPageTest waterfalls, and CrUX field data rather than simulated metrics, which bridges the gap between tutorial and professional practice. The workshop's focus on a single, realistic project (rather than a series of disconnected toy exercises) is appropriate for the subject: web performance work lives in real measurement data, and the course correctly models that. The project repository's 87 forks suggest learners actively run the exercises rather than just watching. The main limitation is scope: the project is a static storefront, so learners working primarily on Single Page Applications, server-rendered frameworks like Next.js, or complex state-heavy UIs will need to extrapolate some of the tactics. There is no separate project tier with more complex application types.

Real-world use4.9 / 5

Web performance is one of the highest-ROI skills a working web developer can acquire in 2024-2026: Core Web Vitals are a confirmed Google Search ranking signal, and the business case studies cited throughout the course (eCommerce and SaaS conversion improvements correlated with performance gains) are drawn from real production data. Gardner's background running RUM tools for thousands of teams means the tactics are not academic — they are the same ones practitioners reach for when a client's LCP score drops. Multiple student reviews specifically noted immediate applicability: Álex Castelo wrote that the course made them realize "how easy it can be to boost a website's performance exponentially," and Yuganshu Mohan distilled the practical lesson as "focus on the worst metric and perform the most basic fixes." The methodological frame — measure with real user data first, then fix, then confirm — transfers directly to professional performance audits. Taran Bains, writing an extended reference post from the course material in August 2025, used it as the foundation for a comprehensive web performance guide, which is a reliable signal that the content holds up as a reference long after the initial watch-through.

Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.