Willkürlich: Bewertungen für diesen hoffnungsvollen Mitbewerber mit Ringpassform sind nicht gut
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When Ring Fit Abenteuer was first announced, einige von uns waren nicht überzeugt. Wii-Sport war großartig, aber am ende sind wir hart runtergefallen, and having all that extra equipment was a bit of a pain. But we were wrong. Ring Fit Adventure is very good — good enough to spawn competition.
Enter the Quell Hero, design studio Morrama’s “future of fitness gaming” platform that, much like Ring Fit, tasks its players with jogging through a linear 3D world and fighting monsters. Die Wendung? It’s all boxercise, powered by a haptic-enabled waistband attached to resistance bands and motion-tracking controllers.
The haptics are new — the trailer promises that it will feel like you’re being punched (yay?). There’s even competitive and co-op modes, which Ring Fit doesn’t have.
But Quell Hero is, vielleicht, not the future of fitness after all, and certainly doesn’t look poised to take Ring Fit’s throne.
“It’s already clear to me that the Quell Hero won’t topple Nintendo’s title to become the next big thing in fitness gaming,” says TechRadar’s Adam Vjestica, who criticises the limited range of exercises and the $219 price –which, although cheaper than a Nintendo Switch und Ring Fit Abenteuer, is more expensive than gerade Ringpassung, and doesn’t, you know, have lots of other games. He even says that playing Wii Tennis with weighted wristbands feels “far more compelling to play than mindlessly boxing.”
“There’s no reason to choose this over Ring Fit Adventure, [a] Quest 2, or even Wii-Fit was das anbelangt. […] Nintendo and Meta’s hardware isn’t just designed solely around fitness games, entweder, which means the value proposition is far greater than the Quell Hero could ever hope to achieve.”
– Adam Vjestica, TechRadar
Back to Ring Fit Adventure for us, dann. Or maybe it’s time to pick up Fitnessboxen 2…?
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