2. Well cause we noticed that the advantage of ORM wasn't as great. In strongly typed languages like c# and lesser extend c++/python having an actual object of a known class/format can give a lot of help during development. In javascript the libraries we checked weren't using this, and were constantly modifying the objects itself, making it often unclear what the actual object would look like until runtime. At that point ORM became just something "we set up, but weren't sure about the return anyways"; and manual checks had to be implemented anyways.