Wii Fit | 
| From: Nintendo Category: Video Games
Buy New: $148.94 as of 3/11/2010 22:18 CST details
New (20) Used (8) from $120.99
Seller: networldoverstock Rating: 1585 reviews Sales Rank: 212
Platform: Nintendo Wii Genre: sports-and-outdoors-game-genre ESRB: Everyone Media: Video Game Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Number Of Items: 1 Batteries Included: No Age: 5 - 20 years Operating System: Nintendo Wii Shipping Weight (lbs): 10 Dimensions (in): 20.5 x 13.2 x 3.1
MPN: RVLRRFNE Model: RVLRRFNE UPC: 045496901080 EAN: 0045496901080 ASIN: B000VJRU44
Publication Date: May 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Wii Fit comes with the Wii Balance Board and requires a Wii console to play. Wii console sold separately. | | • | Wii Fit combines fitness with fun and is designed for everyone, young and old. Wii Fit players work towards personal fitness goals and they block soccer balls, swivel hips to power hoop twirls, and go big on ski jumps to get themselves there. | | • | Check your daily progress, set goals, check your Wii Fit Age, and even enter exercise time you've done outside of Wii Fit. | | • | Wii Fit Age is measured by factoring the user's BMI reading, testing the user's center of gravity and conducting quick balance tests. | | • | Training is at the core of Wii Fit. You can spend as much (or as little) time as you want trying out all of the 40+ activities Wii Fit offers. |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com The active-play phenomenon started by Wii Sports now spreads to your whole body thanks to Wii Fit and the pressure-sensitive Wii Balance Board, which comes bundled with it. Used together players will experience an extensive array of fun, dynamic and surprisingly challenging activities, including aerobics, yoga, muscle stretches and balance oriented games. The focus of these activities is towards providing a "core" workout, a popular exercise method that emphasizes slower, controlled motions, but it's the fun approach to fitness of Wii Fit that will keep players hooked on fitness for years to come. The Wii Balance Board. View larger. |  Calculate your BMI and Wii Fit age. View larger. |  Enjoy a wide variety of mini-games. View larger. |  Follow your own personal trainer. View larger. |  Track your progress against friends. View larger. | The Wii Fit Balance Board The primary tenet of Wii Fit is balance. Your center of balance, the point between your left and right sides when you stand upright, has a lot to do with your health. Those without an even center of balance will be unnaturally compensating for this imbalance, which causes their posture to become misaligned, increasing the possibility of putting unnecessary strain on their bodies. This is where the Wii Balance Board comes in.Similar in appearance to a step aerobics board, the Wii Balance Board is much, much more. Easily capable of supporting weights up to a maximum of 300 pounds, it is sturdy and precise, able to measure weight and register pressure accurately when placed on a variety of flat surfaces. This advanced level of sensitivity allows for both the wide range of activities found in the Wii Fit software as well as the board's amazing ability recognize individual players by their weight alone.Getting Started: Create a Profile Before you jump into doing exercises and activities, you'll start by creating a profile. This is done easily and intuitively by simply choosing a Mii, entering your height and age information, and doing a few quick tests that will serve as a baseline for your new Wii fitness regimen. These tests are:- BMI Check: BMI, or Body Mass Index, is a measure of body fat based on height and weight that is the standard used by agencies such as the World Health Organization and the National Institute of Health. To check your BMI, you'll enter your height then stand on the Wii Balance Board and let it read your weight.
- Wii Fit Age: After you've checked your BMI, you'll do a basic balance test and find out your current Wii Fit Age. This basic balance test measures how well you can control your left and right balance. Based on the results, you'll be assigned a Wii Fit Age.
Four Categories of Fun Once you have created your profile it's time to have some fun. Wii Fit features four main categories of exercises to choose from: Strength Training, Aerobics, Yoga and Balance Games. Wii Fit will guide you through the first three with the help of your own virtual personal trainer, while the balance games offer variety and fun to help keep you engaged and excited about your fitness goals. In addition, as you spend time exercising, you'll earn Fit Credits that unlock additional exercises and activities within your favorite categories that will allow you to continue to push yourself. See more detail on the four categories below: - Strength Training: Put your strength to the test with muscle-toning exercises like Single Leg Extension, Sideways Leg Lift, Arm and Leg Lift, Single-Arm Stand, Torso Twists, Rowing Squat, Single Leg Twist, Lunge, Push-Up and Side Plank, Jackknife, Plank and Tricep Extension. Challenges include Push-Up Challenge, Plank Challenge and Jackknife Challenge.
- Aerobics: Get your heart pumping with fun, interactive Aerobic exercises like Hula Hoop, Basic Step, Basic Run, Super Hula Hoop, Advanced Step, 2-P Run, Rhythm Boxing, Free Step and Free Run.
- Yoga: Work on your balance and flexibility with Yoga poses and activities like Deep Breathing, Half-Moon, Dance, Cobra, Bridge, Spinal Twist, Shoulder Stand, Warrior, Tree, Sun Salutation, Standing Knee, Palm Tree, Chair, Triangle and Downward-Facing Dog.
- Balance Games: Get into the action with fun, balanced-based games like Soccer Heading, Ski Slalom, Ski Jump, Table Tilt, Tightrope Walk, Balance Bubble, Penguin Slide, Snowboard Slalom and Lotus Focus.
Keep Track of Your Progress Because keeping fit is an ongoing process, Wii Fit also tracks the activities you do the most and puts them into your Favorites category. With this information players can note exercises and activities that they are strong in, as well as others that may need to improve at. Some of the ways players can use this information for are to: - Keep tabs on your daily progress with easy-to-understand graphs and charts. Using your personal profile, you can set goals, view a graph of your BMI results over time, see how many Fit Credits you've earned, check your Wii Fit Age and even enter exercise time you've done outside of Wii Fit. It's all about coming back and exercising a little every day, and the personal profile makes tracking your daily progress simple and easy.
- Quickly check your Wii Fit Age and BMI without even putting the game in the console by going directly to the Wii Fit Channel.
- Allow up to eight family members can create their own profiles in Wii Fit. On the profile-selection screen, everyone in the family can see each other's recent BMI progress and Fit Credit total. This will allow families to have a friendly competition to exercise and get fit.
Variety, fun and progress tracking; Wii Fit has it all. So, Wii owners if you ready to reclaim your balance and get fit all you need is Wii Fit, a few minutes a day to play and the urge to have fun. Get on board today.
Album Description The hit combination of Wii Sports and the Wii Remote brought golf swings and tennis serves into people's homes. Now Nintendo turns the living room into a fitness center for the whole family with Wii Fit and the Wii Balance Board. Family members will have fun getting a "core" workout, and talking about and comparing their results and progress on a new channel on the Wii Menu. Lean to block soccer balls, swivel hips to power hoop twirls or balance to hold the perfect yoga pose. As users stand on the Wii Balance Board, included with Wii Fit, their body's overall balance is tied to the game in a way they've never experienced before. Wii Fit also uses the Wii Balance Board for daily tests. These evaluate two key measures that a household can track via progress charts:
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 1585
Not for a person already in semi-decent shape March 7, 2010 Stacey S. Anderson (Michigan) I was SO excited to get the Wii fit and have something to do indoors when the weather's not nice. I thought it would be something to teach me better balance and get more exercise and be like a fun, addicting game. I was hoping the fitness part would be as addicting as a video game - but exercising while I played! Not at all.
It's like going to a gym for 80-year-old people. You NEVER get your heart rate up. After every single exercise, regardless of how short it is, there's a long wait while you select more stuff and hear stupid reviews about how well or poorly you did. Every single time you go down the ski hill you have to listen to the music, watch the stupid character dance or mourn depending on his score, wait for the stupid machine to tell you you're "out of balance" and keep pushing "A" and wanting to scream out of frustration. There are constant breaks in the boxing, too. The hula hoop would be OK if you got to do it for longer without stopping.
It's also very naggy. It's like having a teacher micromanaging your every move, constantly making you stop and giving you "constructive criticism" rather than letting you try again and again until you get it right. I don't need somebody telling me how well I did - I can see my score.
I HATE it. When you add up the cost of the Wii itself, then the extra controllers, the Wii Fit - I spent $600.00 for a stupid machine that's good for nothing but playing Sims Castaway. We already own a PlayStation - and Dance Dance Revolution is a MUCH better workout anyway. I'm going to the video store to rent Rhythm Kung Fu. If it's not a decent workout, I'm selling the d&*) thing on E-bay. I haven't been this angry in a long, long time. That (...) could have gone to buy new cycling shoes and a TON of outdoor fitness gear.
Oh - and by the way - I'm a slightly overweight 40-year-old woman in only semi-decent shape.
Come on, Nintendo! If you want to give people a REAL workout, make an addictive game out of it. Make it like playing a martial arts based video game where you run around mazes punching and kicking people or something - something you could play for hours and only want to stop when you're so exhausted you physically can't do it anymore. This is totally lame.
Get Fit! March 7, 2010 Polweri This is a fun game, but a few more games/exercises would have been nice. Great way to get you off the couch while playing Wii. This game would be more enjoyable if you could involve or challenge 2 people.
WAIT!!! February 27, 2010 Dann Fox (Centreville, Virginia) This is surely a wonderful product, but make sure you get the Wii Fit Plus version. It has ALL of the features of Wii Fit and then some. I hope I caught you in time.
Love it February 14, 2010 Atlana Bunn (Dickson, TN) I love this game. The weather can't stop me from exercising now, no costly gym membership, and it is actually alot of fun. Whenever i get the board out there's a line of family members that wants to play. I LOVE IT!
Get EA Sports Active instead February 8, 2010 K. Babolea (chicago) The workout is ok and fun, but there are other options now for this type of game...I like the EA Sports Active much better
Showing reviews 1-5 of 1585
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