Mega video game publisher Electronic Arts has announced it will launch EA Sports Active for the Wii in spring 2009 (we presume they’re referring to the northern hemisphere) as the first is what the company is claiming will be a new line of fitness products. On the Wii, EA Sports Active will compete with Nintendo’s own Wii Fit, launched earlier this year, and will join a growing number of titles (including one from Jillian Michaels) designed to get normally sedentary video gamers up and moving around.
Tag Archive: fitness
GPS-Based Fitness With MotionLingo
MotionLingo, a developer of GPS fitness and recreation products, earlier this month unveiled a new device for announcing real time statistics while you workout outdoors. The new Adeo Fitness Companion is priced at $149.99 and available now.
The Adeo Fitness Companion, said MotionLingo, is slightly smaller then an iPod and weighs 2.1 ounces. It is designed to collect workout data utilizing GPS and then vocally share that information with its user at selected intervals. Statistics which can be reported on include speed, distance, time, elevation and calories burned. Data collected during a workout can later be uploaded through a USB port from the Adeo to management software on a computer as well as the MotionLingo Web site for more in-depth tracking and analysis.
Work Out with McDonald’s Yourself!Fitness
McDonald’s and responDESIGN, the software publisher of the fitness video game Yourself!Fitness, today said they were entering a promotional partnership under which special DVD versions of the game will be made available through the fast food company for a limited time. Four different workout DVDs will be released during the April 25 to May 22 promotion period.
DDR Coming to 24 Hour Fitness
Familiar with Dance Dance Revolution? The game which is hot in arcades and other venues is now making its way into fitness clubs as Konami and 24 Hour Fitness announced today a partnership which will bring it to 24 Hour locations nationwide.
DDR, which will be added to 24 Hour Fitness’ Kids Clubs, originally made its debut in Japan in 1998. The game allows users to dance to energetic dance music as the dance steps are laid out on a screen. Konami said the game has created a “fitness phenomenon†in helping to get people off of their couches – DDR also comes in console versions – and in better shape. It has apparently recently begun appearing in the physical fitness curriculum in multiple school districts throughout the United States and now looks to begin making a splash at other non-traditional arcade locations.

