Blocksi Reviews

2.5

29% would recommend to a friend

(23 total reviews)

16% positive business outlook

Blocksi has an employee rating of 2.5 out of 5 stars, based on 23 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Blocksi employee rating is 35% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

23 reviews
1.0
Apr 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Free coffee, pizzas on Fridays, occasional snacks or fruit, free water, free pocket tissues. Gym membership is provided and covers a specific gym in town chosen by the company. 45-minute lunch break and a great office location. I would say great coworkers, but most people leave quickly, so you don’t really get enough time to get to know them anymore.

Cons

Minimum annual leave allowance (“regres”) and Christmas bonus every year; employees would probably not receive this if it wasn’t required by law. There are no other monetary benefits that you don’t have to work extremely hard to get, and even then it is questionable whether you will receive your bonus. The company relies heavily on cheap labor from Slovenian students who are not appreciated. The company has earned a bad reputation locally due to constant turnover and a toxic workplace. “Management” is basically one person, the CEO (leadership), and the company feels more like a CEO ego-driven project where all decisions depend on him. Layoffs are rare, mostly because people leave on their own. Communication from the CEO is sarcastic and at times humiliating, often framed as (poor) satirical jokes. The CEO enforces rules he makes up as he goes, changes them at will, and avoids accountability, with no constructive feedback or performance reviews. Situations where previously approved or discussed conversations and instructions are later dismissed are common, even when there is written proof, creating constant confusion about what has actually been agreed upon. Gaslighting and bullying are constant and exhausting. Every day is a rollercoaster, as you don’t know which version of the CEO you’re going to get: a relaxed, trying-to-be-relatable boss or a micromanaging/defensive one. Everything requires the CEO’s approval, who is also head and manager of every team, and promises like raises or promotions are often pushed aside to fit leadership agendas. There is zero autonomy, managers exist on paper but are often ignored since employees are told to go directly to the CEO, and teams and people are often played against each other. No remote work, except in selective cases approved by the CEO based on preference rather than any clear company policy, and HR provides no real support as they simply follow whatever the CEO instructs. Regarding the product, it has potential and a solid idea behind it, but with high turnover and a lot of work done by students, long-term stability is unlikely. The systems rely on outdated, “old-school” approaches that slow down development and maintenance, priorities are misaligned toward new features instead of technical debt, and projects that should take 1–2 months often take more than 8 months due to constant interruptions and rework. Finding information is slow, onboarding is basically non-existent, and understanding the system takes far longer than it should. Most negative reviews are accurate, and while it may work as a short-term option for students who want experience and can tolerate a chaotic environment, the first few months can feel positive but that does not last as leadership shows the reality. Spending time watching YouTube or playing chess during the workday is often the most practical option and what many employees (students) end up doing, as it is tolerated more than initiative or pushing ideas that could potentially threaten someone’s ego, and I would not recommend this company for full-time, long-term employment of more than two years.

1.0
Jan 23, 2026

Guaranteed existential crises every Monday morning.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Free pizza on Fridays, croissants, and bananas occasionally appear, presumably to remind employees what joy feels like. - There are some good professionals working there. You just do not get to work together for long because the decent ones usually leave fast. That probably says enough. - Everyday chaos in the workflow ensures that you’ll never get bored and that no decision is ever final. Keeps life exciting. - Arguably the best perk is being able to leave. Leaving the company provides an immediate and noticeable improvement in mental health, self respect, and overall quality of life.

Cons

Working for this company was the most draining experience imaginable, and the CEO’s behavior is the root cause of what is wrong with the company’s work culture. The CEO behaves in a highly unpredictable and emotionally reactive manner, with frequent outbursts when things do not go his way. His mood changes constantly, which makes it extremely difficult to work in a stable or professional environment. He positions himself not only as the CEO, but also as a software engineer, DevOps, marketing specialist, salesperson, QA, and head and VP of every department, presenting himself as someone who knows better than anyone else in all areas. In short, a man of many talents, but a master of none. He micromanages every department while lacking a clear understanding of many of the areas he interferes with, yet consistently insists that his way is the only correct one. This results in excessive control, frequent yelling at employees, and the creation of restrictive rules that remove autonomy and require employees to constantly fight for basic respect. From a technical perspective, the product is good in theory and has potential for a strong future. However, the codebase and overall service architecture are outdated and unable to handle higher loads, which leads to frequent and ongoing downtime. Instead of addressing these core technical issues, the approach taken is to heavily overpay for cloud services and scale infrastructure excessively, creating unnecessary costs rather than fixing the underlying problems. There is effectively no workflow. Sprints start and end based solely on the CEO’s mood rather than any structured planning process. The workplace culture itself feels immature, with constant gossip that is actively encouraged by leadership. The CEO regularly puts others down, creating a psychologically unsafe and demoralizing environment. You can feel the bad energy within the first five minutes of being in the office — your alarm bells start ringing almost instantly. People are quitting left and right, saving themselves before they get lost in the toxicity. If you don’t respect yourself, love being lied to and manipulated, want to be micromanaged at every step, even as a cleaning lady when buying toilet paper, and want to come home in tears, feeling numb and devoid of life, then Blocksi is the place for you.

2.0
Dec 22, 2025

Good people, deeply broken management

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- The best thing about Blocksi is the people. Most coworkers are genuinely good, capable, and easy to work with, and that is honestly the main reason many people stay as long as they do. Pay is decent and (locally) competitive. There are small perks like snacks and pizza fridays, but they don’t really matter in the bigger picture. - The company is also doing well financially and keeps growing year after year, which shows that the product has demand and that the business itself could be pretty successful long term.

Cons

- The biggest problem is leadership, especially the CEO. He holds too many roles, refuses to delegate them, and is involved in nearly every decision. He believes he knows better than everyone else, which makes open discussion difficult. Feedback from people doing the actual work is usually ignored, and disagreements can quickly become unpleasant, including raised voices or verbal offensiveness. - Because the company continues to grow financially, leadership sees little reason to address internal issues. High turnover, technical debt, and broken processes are tolerated as long as profits look good. At the same time, there is constant pressure to cut costs on infrastructure and long-term stability, while money is easily spent on AI trends, shiny tools, or unused HR initiatives. Priorities feel backwards. - Planning is consistently poor. Although the company claims to follow Scrum, it mostly consists of daily meetings. The CEO (PO) often joins late or not at all, then asks people to repeat their updates. Sprint planning is inconsistent, retrospectives are rare, and sprint lengths change based on the CEO’s mood. Work is often assigned late and impulsively, driven by trends rather than clear product needs, which creates unnecessary stress and chaos. - Scrum Masters add little value. They are misaligned, focus heavily on Jira and time tracking, and are extremely slow to respond when actual support is needed. - The core tech stack is legacy, fragile, and difficult to work with and maintain. Much of it was built without proper architecture or documentation, and instead of investing in cleanup or modernization, more features are layered on top. This has led to frequent breakages and scalability issues. - Turnover is extremely high. Experienced people leave often, with little knowledge transfer. New hires are usually junior, given minimal guidance, and expected to handle complex systems without proper support. - Career growth and compensation feel reactive and inconsistent. Raises and promotions often happen only when someone is close to leaving, rather than being tied to performance or long-term contribution. - Work-life balance and flexibility are unfair and inconsistent. Remote and hybrid work, working hours, and expectations vary by person and country, depending largely on individual negotiation with the CEO. Boundaries are sometimes ignored, including requests to work during vacations. - Overall, I would not recommend this company to anyone at the moment. From the outside it looks successful, but internally it feels overcontrolled, underinvested, and increasingly fragile. Without meaningful changes, it risks collapsing from within.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 23 Reviews

Glassdoor has 24 Blocksi reviews submitted anonymously by Blocksi employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Blocksi is right for you.