Wii Fit coming to U.S. in May

Tue Apr 15, 2008 3:25PM EDT

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First announced way, way back in July of last year, the nifty, wireless balance board accessory for the Wii finally has a North American release date: May 19. Get ready to engage those abs.

The Wii Fit bundle (available in Japan since last December) will sell for $89.99, according to Crave—not exactly cheap, but at least it'll come bundled with a battery of exercises—involving yoga, aerobics, strength training, and balance—that’ll get you off the couch and, with any luck, make you break a sweat.

IGN (via Yahoo! Games) has a thorough preview of Wii Fit, but I’ll tick off some of the main points: You get the wireless, plastic balance board (which, apparently, supports a whopping 660 pounds, although it stops measuring over 330 pounds) plus the battery of 40 mini-games and exercises.

Among them: strength-training exercises, including a push-up/yoga combo (which sounds devilishly difficult), single-leg extensions, arm/leg lifts, a variety of squats and lunges, and side planks (ouch). There’s also plenty of aerobic action, including steps, runs, and rhythm boxing. Then there’s the yoga, complete with your standard deep breathing, half moons, a potpourri of poses, you name it. This ain't no button-mashing on the couch.

What makes Wii Fit more fun than your standard exercise DVD is the on-screen trainer (either male or female, as IGN notes) who critiques your form and doles out encouragement, as needed.

Of course, the coolest element of Wii Fit is the wireless balance board, which incorporates two plastic pads—one for each foot—that precisely measure you weight and balance.

From the demos I’ve seen, the board does an uncanny job of detecting your overall stance and posture; indeed, based on your weight and balance, it’ll compute your body mass index (BMI) and tell you if you’re overweight, underweight, or just right. The Wii Fit software will also track your BMI daily and tell you your progress over time.

Early reviews have been generally positive; for example, Chris Kohler at Wired News tried Wii Fit for about a month and came away pretty happy, calling it a "convenient and helpful way for me to get back in shape." Keep in mind, however, that Kohler didn't so much lose weight as build muscle (not such a bad thing, considering that you're playing a video game).

I haven't had a chance to try Wii Fit myself, but the demo during last year's E3 gaming conference looked pretty impressive; I especially liked the soccer ball head-butting game, which lets you (natch) head-butt a torrent of virtual soccer balls, all from the comfort of the balance board—nice. (Hmmmm...how about a surfing game? Or skateboarding?)

So, who out there's looking forward to Wii Fit? Anyone else tried it? What about the price tag?

Related:
'Wii Fit' craze set to launch May 19 [Crave]
Wii Fit preview [IGN, via Yahoo! Games]

Comments on Wii Fit coming to U.S. in May

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  • 2 Posted by gocking@sbcglobal.net on Tue Apr 15, 2008 6:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    I'm not tech literate at all. I created a website on Frontpage and now I don't know how to get it to my Wise FTP to send it to my account with 1and1.com Is there anyone who has time to type out what I need to do?

  • 3 Posted by m_hiromi on Wed Apr 16, 2008 6:30AM EDT Report Abuse

    Since I live in Japan, I've seen it in stores and many of my friends and classmates have it. I can say honestly that it is a good buy, but maybe wait for the price to go down. Although I have not played it myself, all of my friends who have it are very positive about Wii Fit.

  • 4 Posted by lil_smurf_131 on Wed Apr 16, 2008 1:17PM EDT Report Abuse

    I think is very cheap, considering the amount of money americans waste on dietary suplements and memberships and special trainers just to lose weight. all im saying is watch out kids your parents are coming for your wii.

  • 5 Posted by erinshesse on Wed Apr 16, 2008 6:38PM EDT Report Abuse

    If people are looking to this device as an alternative to real exercise, they are going to continue to be the fat fatties they've always been. I don't know how this article can claim someone gained muscle from this. Maybe some strength or motor coordination was gained, but I highly doubt muscle gain resulted unless the person had some serious muscle atrophy immediately before wii-ing it up. What a joke. I love it.

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