Reviews// Wii Fit
Link to this: http://spong.com/feature/10109712
04 Dec 2007 19:00
by Jonti Davies
Saturday December 1st
8.50am: “Get up/get out of bed/drag a comb across my head”.
Today is the Japanese launch of Wii Fit, so I’m up a bit earlier than usual. I'm still bleary-eyed as the wife tells me to get a move on because she’s heard on the news that some people are queuing for the game and its hefty Balance Board accessory. As I hadn’t bothered to make a reservation, there’s no time for breakfast.
I cycle down to the train station and board a train bound for central Kyoto, where I plan to get Wii Fit from our nearest electronics megastore (a shop called Bic Camera).
10.05am: I arrive five minutes past opening time; any queues that were here have already dissipated. But there’s still plenty of stock, so I walk out of the store 8,000yen/£35 lighter – Wii Fit is already helping me to lose pounds.
11:00am: Back home at last after a rotten return train journey – rotten because it was full of compressed people and lacking in oxygen, as everyone was heading out of Kyoto to see the autumn colours at Arashiyama. Plus, the return leg of my bicycle journey was uphill all the way; plus, I was riding like some kind of foreign circus performer with a 4.5kg package hanging from the handlebar. I must have looked like a genuine clown.
\ advertisement /
/ advertisement \
/ advertisement \
11.30am: I’ve recuperated from my early morning exercise (the irony isn’t lost on me). I’m pepped up on the sporting Englishman’s energy drink of choice (a mug of Earl Grey), so it’s time to get Wii Fit and the Balance Board set up and operational.
It takes a few minutes to unwrap the thing, position it in the middle of the living room floor and sync it up with the Wii (the Balance Board has a red button, just like the Wii Remote).
The build of the board is impressive, there’s no way you could send this skidding across the floor because it weighs more than four kilos and has ‘grippy feet’. There are no moving parts either, so it’s less like standing on a seesaw and more like standing on a breezeblock.
There’s a note on the packaging to warn that the Balance Board can only support individuals who weigh less than 136kg, although it seems strong enough to withstand even heavier users.
Surely this limitation could be a problem in, say... America or the UK or anywhere else with a high obesity rate? Perhaps Nintendo will manufacture an even tougher Balance Board for the benefit of portly gamers worldwide?
Comments on this Review
7 comments on-line.
will work so well with this type of game fuck free sky and the sixaxis i feel this will be far better
First comment
Posted by Petter
Great review!!
Latest comment
Posted by phil cort
i cant belive how good this is all so it has got me thinking on why 1080 has not been released yet as the Balance Boardwill work so well with this type of game fuck free sky and the sixaxis i feel this will be far better
Post your own comment
Don't go posting anonymously! Log-in or register for the unexpurgated experience.Companies
Competitions
There are no competitions running right now.
If you've entered one of our recent competitions, then check out the winners
If you've entered one of our recent competitions, then check out the winners
Polls
Latest Features
| Feature// SPOnG: August in Japan | 20|Aug |
| Preview// Tomb Raider: Underworld | 18|Aug |
| Preview// Aion: Tower of Eternity | 14|Aug |
| Interview// Splash Damage Founder, Paul Wedgwood | 11|Aug |
| Review// Rhythm Tengoku Gold | 7|Aug |
| Interview// Richard Lemarchand, Lead Designer, Uncharted | 7|Aug |
| Preview// Fallout 3 Hands On | 5|Aug |
| Interview// Industry Leader, Chris Deering | 5|Aug |
| Feature// Rhythm and the Revolution | 25|Jul |
| Preview// Motorstorm Pacific Rift | 24|Jul |









