The second most fun way to move your body.
by Steve Steinberg, 5/21/2008 12:00 AM
What's Hot: If you've never bet money on your yoga skills, that's about to change.
What's Not: You're not going to get jacked with the thing and some of the mini-games may feel like filler.
Crispy Gamer Says:
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Two words: competitive yoga. Leave it to Nintendo to take what for most people is an incredibly introspective and spiritual practice and turn it into what could easily become one of the coolest party/drinking games of all-time. Pure genius. And it's just one of many things that makes Wii Fit a must-have for anyone who likes to do more than just thumb-work in their gaming. There's definitely some filler to the package, but there are far more hits than misses.
I've been waiting a while for Wii Fit to drop on this side of the planet. In addition to having written hundreds of game reviews, I've also written dozens of fitness articles for national magazines and have just started work on my second fitness book. While roughly 90 percent of my game reviews are based solely on what I've gathered from reading press releases and what's written on the back of the game case -- heck, I don't even own some of the consoles for which I've reviewed games -- here, I actually know what I'm talking about. So, will playing Wii Fit turn you into a ripped, buff and sexy dude or dudette? Probably not. There's not a balanced enough approach to things -- especially in the strength training department. Will it get you moving and using parts of your body you've never used before and developing skills and attributes that you've never even thought about? Definitely.
Unlike Wii Sports, which comes bundled with the console and uses nothing more than the Wii remote and Nunchuk to get you up and moving, Wii Fit lets you do your gaming and exercising on the Wii Balance Board. It's a nifty apparatus that not only lets you know your weight, but also lets you know how you use that weight. The board measures the subtleties of your movement to tell you how much of your weight is on your left foot versus your right and your toes versus your heels. The ultimate goal of the disk is to give you better body awareness that'll lead to better balance, posture and core strength. Not a bad set of goals.
Exercises are broken down into four categories: strength training, aerobics, balance games, and yoga. And while there are merits to all of them, logistics and the laws of physics make some more fun and effective than others.
Strength training probably suffers the most. Because you're dealing with bodyweight exercises -- you don't use dumbbells or any other type of resistance -- and because the measurement device, the Balance Board, is located on the floor, you're limited to strength exercises that have you pushing against the Earth's gravitational pull. For upper body development, this means you can get a great chest and triceps workout by doing push-ups, but there's really no way to target the back and biceps, since those are generally pulling motions. There's a pulling rowing motion that's part of a squat routine, but since it's done without any form of resistance -- gravitational or otherwise -- it won't do much to give you that sick, v-shaped, cobra's-head-looking back that you may be searching for.
Lower body development also has it problems. The lunges are cool and if you've never done any before, a few sets of them will make sitting down the next day a bit painful. Squats, though, suffer from the design of the balance board. The majority of people need to have their feet wider than shoulder-width apart to do squats safely and comfortably. At just 18-inches across, the balance board simply isn't wide enough. If you've never done any strength training before, stick with the push-ups and lunges and spend the majority of your time with the game's other
Filed Under: Wii balance board, exergaming, simulation, Wii Health Pack, Shigeru Miyamoto, Yoga, Push ups, step aerobics, Hula hooping, ski jumping, jogging, tightrop walking, Wii Fit, Wii, yoga, Wii Balance Board, balance, posture, strength training, exercise