Drag13.io is a personal developer tech blog focused on JavaScript, React, Next.js, TypeScript, web performance, and security. The crawled content shows a large number of hands-on articles, such as building apps with ReScript, React, and Vite; configuring Prettier, ESLint, Husky, and Jest for a Next.js 13 project and deploying it to Azure; as well as topics like React Server Components, advanced TypeScript techniques, CSP, security and privacy, and Puppeteer-based performance testing.
From a developer-tooling perspective, it is not a SaaS platform but a knowledge resource. Its value lies mainly in engineering practice: project initialization, type-system modeling, performance metric collection, testing under slow network and weak CPU conditions, collecting Core Web Vitals, and more. The text also repeatedly mentions Perfrunner, an automated website performance tracking tool built by the author on top of Puppeteer. It can be run via npm and supports configuration files, network condition adjustments, multi-URL testing, and related features. The ecosystem covered is broad, including React, Next.js, TypeScript, Vite, ReScript, Puppeteer, Jest, ESLint, Prettier, Husky, and Azure.
The crawled text does not show any commercial pricing, subscriptions, or payment methods. The blog posts are publicly accessible, and the React introductory course is explicitly described as free, with course materials published on GitHub. Perfrunner is mentioned as usable via npx, but its open-source license, maintenance status, and long-term roadmap are not clearly stated in the text, so its commercial support capability cannot be assessed.
Its strengths are that the content is close to real-world frontend engineering problems and does not stop at the conceptual level. In particular, the articles on TypeScript type inference, Puppeteer-based performance collection, and React project engineering configuration are valuable references. The drawbacks are also obvious: it is a personal blog and lacks systematic documentation, API references, SLA, enterprise support, and complete product descriptions. Some course videos are described as being in Ukrainian, which may not be especially friendly for Chinese-speaking learners.
It is suitable for frontend developers with some experience, React/TypeScript learners, and engineers who want to incorporate performance testing into CI/CD. The crawled text does not provide enough information to judge accessibility from China, and there is no payment-related information. If you need more systematic Chinese-language alternatives, it can be used alongside the official React, TypeScript, and Next.js documentation, as well as MDN, web.dev, Lighthouse, and Puppeteer documentation.
โ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on drag13.io official site.
drag13.io is an United States Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach drag13.io directly.