Move over, Dance Dance Revolution. FitXR is the best mix of video gaming and working out that I’ve ever encountered.
Many have tried to make a system where you play a video game and get a workout, but the best one I’ve seen is this one, where you basically work out in a virtual gym inside a virtual reality game. And while the idea of moving your body while playing video games goes as far back as 1988, with Nintendo’s Power Pad, most hybrids of this sort lean toward being a video game that makes you move a bit, or a fitness app that barely passes as a sad facsimile of a video game. FitXR is an excellent blend of both activities.
I’ve got over 20 years of fitness experience, both as a personal trainer in conventional, CrossFit, and powerlifting gyms and as a competitive athlete. This is about 19 years more experience than I have with VR. A virtual reality workout is about as far from the sweat-humid, chipped dumbbell dungeons that I grew up with, so the promise that I would get a satisfactory workout by donning goggles and playing a video game filled me with skepticism.
To access the game, you’re going to need a $299 Meta Quest VR headset and the requisite Facebook account. (In case you haven't been following the news, the Oculus name is disappearing as part of Facebook's rebranding as Meta Platforms, and the Oculus Quest headset is going to be called Meta Quest. Also, a Facebook account won't be required to use one starting next year. For now, you'll still need a Facebook login.)
Once you’ve purchased the FitXR app in the Oculus app store, the game takes you to the main screen, which looks like a sleek fitness center, complete with a front desk. After you’ve created a profile with your basic info like name, age, weight, and gender (including a nonbinary option), you can get to work.
The classes come in three categories: boxing, dancing, and high-intensity interval training. The classes range in time from five to 35 minutes and come with three levels of difficulty: light, medium, and hard. The game also offers multiplayer classes, in which you can play live against up to six people, racking up points as you hit targets and accumulate streaks. Currently, there are over 300 classes available, with a new class released every day. In fact, at last week's news event to announce the rebranding, Meta Platforms said a bunch of new experiences were being added to FitXR, though I haven't tried those yet. (Also announced: a boxing experience inside the Supernatural workout app, which I'm also eager to strap into.)