Peer mock interviews vs everyday practice

Pramp is a practical way to rehearse interviews with peers. EraCode helps you stay sharp between those sessions—and build skills that last past the offer.

How is EraCode different from Pramp?

Pramp focuses on peer-to-peer mock technical and behavioral interviews—useful, accessible interview rehearsal. EraCode focuses on daily skill maintenance: short, stack-aware challenges with AI feedback so coding fundamentals stay warm between mocks and after you start the job. Many people use both.

What Pramp is great at

Peer mock interviews approximate real screens at low cost: you practice explaining your thinking, handling follow-up questions, and managing nerves with another human in the loop.

For interview season, that social rehearsal is difficult to replace with solo puzzle grinding alone.

Where EraCode is different

EraCode is maintenance you can do in ten minutes without coordinating schedules: coding, quiz, terminal, and multi-part challenges with feedback after each attempt.

Practice skews toward technologies you configure—closer to the stack you will ship on than generic interview templates alone.

Which should you use?

Book mocks when you need communication practice and realistic interview pacing.

Use EraCode between mocks so fundamentals do not rust—debugging, reading unfamiliar code, and finishing focused work under light time pressure.

Good to know

Pramp is a helpful peer mock-interview platform. We are not affiliated with Pramp.

EraCode does not schedule live mocks; it is repeatable solo practice with graded feedback.

When a challenge is timed, we use a server-anchored timer and combine your AI score with how long you took—across coding, terminal, and multi-part submissions.