Web Tutorial List is, by its name and its slot under tutorials and guides, a curated index of web development tutorials sitting at webtutoriallist.com. That is the premise. The trouble is the premise is about all anyone can verify right now, because the site refused to load on repeated attempts and there is almost nothing written about it anywhere else.
When searching for the actual pages, the domain answered with server errors rather than content. One request came back as a Cloudflare origin failure, the 521 you see when the web server behind Cloudflare is down or unreachable, and a second route returned a plain 500. Neither is a fluke of a single bad request; both attempts, taken through different methods, hit the same wall. The homepage, any topic categories, any list of linked tutorials, any about section, none of it could be read. A visitor trying to judge Web Tutorial List on its merits is left judging a closed door.
The whole value of a site like this is in the browsing. You go to a tutorial index to scan headings, follow a few links, and see whether the picks are current and whether the editor has any taste. Web Tutorial List, if it cannot serve its own pages, cannot do the one thing it exists to do. A directory of tutorials that does not open is functionally a name and nothing more, and that is a harder problem to talk around than a restaurant whose phone still rings.
From the title alone, the likely shape of Web Tutorial List is a collection of links or write-ups covering front-end and back-end topics: HTML, CSS, JavaScript, maybe PHP or a framework or two, aimed at people learning to build for the web. But that is inference, not observation. The category label and the domain are doing all the talking. Whether the Web Tutorial List index is large or small, hand-picked or scraped, freshly maintained or abandoned in place, is exactly what only live pages can answer, and the live pages would not answer.
Outside reputation
A search for the name and domain turned up nothing pointing back to webtutoriallist.com itself. No ratings, no review counts, no threads, no mentions on the platforms where a useful learning resource usually leaves a trace. What did surface were other sites with similar names, tutorialsweb.com, webtutorialshub.com, the big general references like W3Schools, none of which are Web Tutorial List and none of which say anything about it.
The absence cuts two ways. Plenty of small niche sites fly under the radar with no Trustpilot footprint and no Reddit chatter, and that on its own would not condemn anything. A quiet resource can still be a solid one. But quiet plus unreachable is a worse combination than either alone. There is no body of outside opinion to lean on, and there is no working site to form a fresh view from. The two gaps reinforce each other instead of one covering for the other.
Contact and transparency sit in the same blind spot. With the pages down, there was no way to check for a contact route, an about page, a name behind the project, or any indication of who maintains it and how recently. Web Tutorial List cannot be faulted for hiding its details, because no one could get far enough to know whether it hides them. Credit for openness is equally off the table. The whole question is suspended.
It is worth saying plainly what the failure does and does not prove. A 521 and a 500 are server-side problems, and server-side problems can be temporary: a host hiccup, an expired certificate, a billing lapse, a migration gone sideways. None of that is proof the site is gone for good, and a visitor checking next week might find it perfectly alive. An outage that holds across multiple attempts is not a great sign for a resource whose only job is to stay up and be browsable, but there is no external evidence to tell whether the downtime is a one-off blip on an otherwise active site or something more permanent.
What nags is the silence around it. A genuinely useful list of web tutorials, even a modest one, tends to pick up at least a few links, a mention, a search result unmistakably about it. Web Tutorial List has none of that to point to, and right now it does not have a working front page to make the case on its own behalf either. Until one of those two things changes, there is no honest way to tell whether Web Tutorial List is a resource caught in a bad week or a name with very little behind it.
So where does that leave Web Tutorial List as a listing? In limbo. The concept is reasonable and the kind of thing learners do hunt for. But concept is the only thing on offer at the moment, and a tutorial index is worth precisely as much as its working pages and its upkeep, both of which are unknown here. The URL is worth trying directly on any given day, because a description of Web Tutorial List cannot substitute for a site that actually opens.