I have built and managed more 10 production codebases that use Hasura -- IMO, I think it's a better option than Supabase, Payload, and others to build your backend. The fact that they are investing time in LLM-related resources for the platform makes me happy we choosed it back when.
LLM's and a framework that's structured and clear enough for LLM's to understand (if you have used Payload CMS and built blocks, fields, or other, this is also an example) has droven a lot of growth in my company. People that took more than 6 months to be productive in our codebases are becoming much more productive way sooner -- and this is not only because Sonnet and 4o are so good, but because we also have tools that put effort in to making sure LLM understand them, and Hasura is one of them.
LLM's and a framework that's structured and clear enough for LLM's to understand (if you have used Payload CMS and built blocks, fields, or other, this is also an example) has droven a lot of growth in my company. People that took more than 6 months to be productive in our codebases are becoming much more productive way sooner -- and this is not only because Sonnet and 4o are so good, but because we also have tools that put effort in to making sure LLM understand them, and Hasura is one of them.