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frontend.vision offers a practical front-end course in Russian, themed around going “from idea to Production.” The course uses Brello, a Trello-like web app, as its case study, guiding students through the full process from technology selection, project initialization, core features, state management, data persistence, architecture design, authentication, board management, and production-readiness. It is not a beginner course; it is aimed at learners who already have a foundation in web development, React, TypeScript, and Node.js.
The course combines long-form written lessons, videos, and homework assignments. After purchase, students can access the modules that have been released; completing assignments unlocks the next module. The site currently lists at least 14 hours of material, with the first 8 modules available and additional modules released roughly every 1–2 weeks. The tech stack includes TypeScript, React, Effector, Vite, Vitest, Supabase, Atomic-Router, Mantine, and Untitled UI, with a particular emphasis on Feature-Sliced Design, CI/CD, testing, and front-end architecture. In addition to recorded videos and articles, the course includes live webinars, code reviews, and Q&A in a Telegram community. Plans with feedback typically receive responses within 24 hours.
The website does not publicly list specific prices, but shows three types of plans: self-study, feedback included, and consultation included. It supports payments from both inside and outside Russia, with options for rubles, US dollars, and cryptocurrency, as well as full payment or installments. The page states that an Early Bird discount is currently available, and that the total price will increase as new modules are released. The course does not mention a completion certificate or third-party accreditation, so its credential value is unclear.
Its strengths are the complete project-based learning path and its focus on real engineering practices: code quality, CI/CD, layered architecture, Supabase backend capabilities, and production preparation are all covered. It also offers a community, live sessions, and code reviews, providing stronger learning support than a purely pre-recorded course. The drawbacks are that the course is still under development and later content has not been delivered all at once; pricing requires inquiry, which reduces transparency; Russian-language instruction creates a high barrier for non-Russian users; and the course relies on a Telegram community.
It is suitable for learners who already have front-end fundamentals and want to build a complete portfolio project while improving their React architecture and engineering skills. It is also a good fit for mid- to senior-level developers who want to study FSD or Effector systematically. For users in mainland China, stable access to the main site is uncertain, while Telegram is usually restricted and external services such as Supabase may experience network instability. Overall, access should be considered “partially restricted.” For payment, cryptocurrency and US dollars may be viable, but users should verify this themselves. Chinese alternatives include front-end engineering courses on Geek Time, imooc, and Juejin Books; English-language alternatives include Frontend Masters, Epic React, and project-based courses on Udemy.
⚠ 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 frontend.vision official site.
frontend.vision is an Russia Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach frontend.vision directly.