Opsera

By Opsera

4.6 out of 5 stars

How would you rate your experience with Opsera?

Opsera Pricing Overview

Free Trial

Pricing Insights

Averages based on real user reviews.

Time to Implement

3 months

Return on Investment

19 months

Perceived Cost

$$$$$

Opsera Pricing Reviews

(2)
HD
Technical Support Engineer
Small-Business (50 or fewer emp.)
"A Flexible and User-Friendly DevOps Orchestration Platform"
What do you like best about Opsera?

Opsera is a great platform for automating and managing CI/CD pipelines without heavy coding requirements. The no-code orchestration makes it easy to integrate different tools across the DevOps ecosystem, which saves a lot of time compared to building custom scripts. I especially like the centralized visibility it provides for deployments, security checks, and analytics, helping teams track the entire software delivery lifecycle in one place.

The platform supports multiple cloud providers and has strong integrations with popular tools like Jenkins, GitHub, and Jira. The pipeline templates and dashboards are intuitive, making onboarding smoother even for teams that are new to DevOps automation. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

What do you dislike about Opsera?

Opsera can feel a bit complex during the initial setup, and some advanced customizations still require extra support. The pricing also seems high for smaller teams. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

Hemanth N.
HN
Graduate Research Assistant
Small-Business (50 or fewer emp.)
"Opsera: Plain-English Security Scans with a Privacy-First MCP Architecture"
What do you like best about Opsera?

Opsera feels like having a senior security engineer sitting beside you who never sleeps, never judges, and speaks plain English. Instead of juggling five different security tools like a circus performer, you just type "scan this repo for vulnerabilities" and watch the magic happen. The MCP architecture is the real genius here, your code never leaves your machine, like having a doctor who makes house calls instead of demanding you bring your entire medical history to a crowded waiting room. The documentation reads like a well-organized cookbook: here's what you're making, here's why it's delicious, here's exactly how to make it. No mystery ingredients, no vague "season to taste" nonsense, you get exact commands like npm install package@version that actually fix problems. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

What do you dislike about Opsera?

Some documentation links lead to dead ends or generic URLs, which breaks the otherwise smooth journey, imagine following a treasure map only to find one of the X marks leads to a blank wall. The claim of "150+ integrations" is tantalizing but unverified; I'd love to see the guest list before committing to this party. The Help Center and Resources sections feel like scaffolding around a building still under construction, promising structure, but you can't move in quite yet. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

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