Every quarter, dev.to surfaces thousands of posts. Most are good. Some hit a nerve. Here are the ones from Q1 2026 that got the biggest response.
The Big News
DEV is officially partnering with Major League Hacking. Biggest platform announcement in a while, and the comments reflect that.
Technical
Benchmarks that challenge the "just use Redis" default. Turns out Postgres can handle more than people think.
Native browser APIs that replace entire npm packages. Clipboard, Intersection Observer, Web Share, and more.
Newer JS features that haven't made it into most codebases yet. Good reference to bookmark.
The same app built in every major framework. Side-by-side comparison of performance, DX, and ecosystem maturity.
Structured learning path from frontend to backend to deployment for 2026.
Career and Industry
Can you really call yourself a developer if you can't debug? AI writes the code, but someone still has to figure out why it doesn't work.
What happens when the people training AI stop understanding the material themselves? 168 comments on this one.
Two posts that fed off each other. "Entry level" now requires senior experience, and companies stopped investing in juniors. Over 300 comments combined.
The web used to feel like a place you could explore and build freely. That feeling is fading.
If your system is poorly designed, better prompts won't save you.
Your green GitHub graph says nothing about you as a developer.
Personal Stories
15 years of helping other developers debug their code, and how that builds real community.
Years of building stuff and earning nothing from it. Writing on dev.to changed that.
Doing everything "right" and burning out anyway. The comments turned into a support thread.
Q1 was heavy on career talk. AI ran through everything, but the posts that resonated most were the personal and opinionated ones. If I missed something, drop it in the comments.
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