Tuesday, February 14 2012

Technology

Product Review: Nintendo Wii Fit


By Marie Boran

Thursday May 29 2008

Pros: Gives a surprisingly solid workout Cons: Set-up is really time-consuming Price: €80 from PC World

The Nintendo Wii console has already changed the face of gaming by creating an emerging casual gamers market where young and old can join in this traditionally teenage male-dominated world with family-friendly games.

However, the real feather in Nintendo’s cap is its latest game, the Wii Fit, which comes with a pressure-sensitive balance board that resembles the plastic platform used in step aerobics.

This piece of technology offers to be your personal trainer and get you fit as a fiddle. But it’s not as simple as just jumping on the balance board and picking an activity.

In order to guide you through the ideal workout for your age and fitness level, the Wii Fit requires you to go through a number of steps to gauge where your fitness is now and where it should be.

This is the most annoying part of the game. It takes around half an hour to set up, gathering information such as your age, height, weight, posture and balance.

But then the fun begins! While the step aerobics and jogging didn’t really appeal to me, the fun games were the ones that left me breathless: the hula-hoop is an aerobics workout, and slalom skiing improves balance.

The hula-hoop game involves you standing on the balance board waiting to be thrown a hula hoop by someone onscreen. You must keep rotating your hips to keep the hoops spinning, while diving either to the left or right, depending on where the new hoops are coming from.

The slalom skiing game was just as fun, rushing down a slope and trying to avoid crashing into all the markers, while the ski jump was pretty difficult and involved good timing and (even better) leg muscles. Feel the burn!

The killer feature of the Wii Fit that sets it apart from the frankly self-delusional purchase of home fitness equipment is the daily tracking of your progress.

You will find yourself stepping up once, maybe twice a day, to see if your weight or BMI (body mass index) has changed. This will encourage you to ‘beat’ your current score, which will inevitably mean fitting in a good workout and perhaps avoiding junk food.

This is why I think the Wii Fit is not as female-oriented as it has been marketed. The competitive element will see as many men as women eager to switch on their Wii every day and get cracking with their goal of the ultimate Wii age.

If €80 seems like a high price for the average Wii game, just think about the investment. It’s much cheaper than gym membership and no one has to see you in a tracksuit and sweatband flailing around ungracefully to step aerobics.

The Wii Fit is available now from Dixons, Currys and PC World.

© Silicon Republic Ltd 2008

All content copyright 2008, Silicon Republic Ltd — all rights reserved

Email: editorial@siliconrepublic.com

© Silicon Republic Ltd 2008

- Marie Boran

 
 


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