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Awesome! Too bad Next.js will never profit from these incredible community efforts, because Vercel suffers from NIH.
It's the Vercel way to first run broken previews for several years.

Next started with Turbopack alpha as a Webpack alternative in Next 13 (October 2022) and finally marked Turbopack as stable and default in Next 16 (October 2025). They also ran sketchy benchmarks against Vite back in 2022 [0].

Next's caching has a terrible history [1], it is demonstrably slow [2] (HN discussion [3]), RSCs had glaring security holes [4], the app router continues to confuse and relied on preview tech for years, and hosting Next outside of Vercel requires a special adapter [5].

Choosing Next.js is a liability.

0 - https://github.com/yyx990803/vite-vs-next-turbo-hmr/discussi...

1 - https://nextjs.org/blog/our-journey-with-caching

2 - https://martijnhols.nl/blog/how-much-traffic-can-a-pre-rende...

3 - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43277148

4 - https://nextjs.org/blog/CVE-2025-66478

5 - https://opennext.js.org/

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Got back in to react after a few years’ hiatus and I struggle to even understand what the point of Next is. Bizarrely the official docs even reference Next. Are people using react for non-SPA’s? Why?
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They have the enterprise partners that make Next.js the only officially supported SDK on their SaaS integrations.

See Sitecore Cloud, Sanity, Contentful,....

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maybe of interest: https://github.com/cloudflare/vinext

(haven't tried it myself)

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