However, there are significant downsides. Many courses appear to be re-uploads of content from Udemy, Coursera, or YouTube – raising clear copyright concerns. Quality control is spotty: broken links, missing sections, outdated info, and zero instructor support. No certificates of completion, and definitely no accreditation.
Here’s a balanced, honest review template for (assuming it’s a course-selling or educational platform — if it’s a specific product/service, let me know and I’ll tailor it further): Title: Decent content, but buyer beware
Customer service is slow or nonexistent. I also noticed aggressive “limited time” pop-ups pushing upsells. If you’re just exploring a topic casually, maybe it’s fine, but for serious skill-building or career use, go with a legitimate platform.
I tried CourseDevil for a few courses, hoping for a budget-friendly way to learn. The positives: the library is huge, and if you’re just looking for raw materials (videos, slides, code files), you’ll probably find what you need. Prices are low compared to official platforms.
Fine for dirt-cheap browsing, but don’t expect polish, support, or legality guarantees.
awsome