• Loading stock data...
Sunday, May 5, 2024
  • -
    days
  • -
    hours
  • -
    minutes
  • -
    seconds

VR Fitness Has to Prove It’s More Than a Video Game

  • Virtual reality could revolutionize the fitness industry.
  • However, it faces hurdles to mass adoption, particularly around associations with video games.
Liteboxer
Liteboxer

Aaron Stanton has worked with many test subjects, but one in particular sticks out in his memory, encapsulating the power and the challenge of VR fitness.

A few days prior, the subjects had come in to establish their peak levels of endurance: They ran on a treadmill wearing a heart rate monitor, oxygen mask, and harness — in case they collapsed from exhaustion — and ran until they had reached their exertion limit.

In the next session, the treadmill was replaced with an active virtual reality game.

This particular subject had reached his limit of physical endurance playing the game, according to his biometrics. Afterward, Stanton asked him what he was going to do for the rest of the day.

“He was like, ‘Well I haven’t gotten in my workout today, so I’m headed to the gym,’” Stanton recalled.

He wasn’t a fitness freak — the VR workout simply didn’t count in his mind. And he wasn’t alone: All of the subjects reached their peak exertion levels and none rated the workout as more than moderately strenuous.

“That’s a blessing and a curse,” Stanton, director of the Virtual Reality Institute of Health and Exercise, told me. VR can make exercise feel fun and breezy. The challenge then becomes convincing people that they actually worked out.

“Our motto is ‘We make working out suck less,’” said Jeff Morin, CEO of Liteboxer, which launched a VR offering in March. I asked him if that phrasing is specifically designed to avoid conflict with the “no pain, no gain” mentality, which he confirmed — then went a step further.

“We avoid using the word ‘fun.’”

That speaks to the peculiar social stigma around VR and fitness: Some of these games are really fun.

Vision Quest

Most VR fitness games or apps can be divided into one of two categories: 

  • Games that require significant physical exertion to score points and complete tasks.
  • Workouts enhanced with immersive environments and gamification that rewards metrics like speed and form.

The first category includes games like “Beat Saber,” in which one smashes flying cubes with lightsabers. In October, “Beat Saber” became the first Oculus Quest game to top $100 million in revenue. 

The latter set includes “Supernatural,” in which a peppy instructor guides you through gamified workouts that have you squat, lunge, and swing your arms as various shapes and objects come at you.

Some game developers seek to straddle the line.

Arnaud Baernhoft, founder of gaming studio Field of Vision and a longtime student and teacher in several disciplines, built what eventually became “Crazy Kung Fu” as a practice tool for himself. 

The gameplay is designed to improve one’s reflexes and basic martial-art skills such as punching, blocking, and ducking — whether or not the player is actively seeking that training.

“You’ve got the gamers who are there for play or challenges, you’ve got the people who are just there for fitness, and then you’ve got those who do martial arts,” said Baernhoft. “I tailor the game to try to fit all of them. The challenge is balancing those three things continuously, to not go too far into one of those areas.”

Within, the production company behind “Supernatural,” was acquired by Meta in December for a reported $400 million in a deal that has attracted FTC scrutiny on antitrust concerns. The move was a clear sign that the Facebook parent was making fitness a major component of its VR play.

“Supernatural” elicited my first Neo-from-the-Matrix “Whoa” — and before the workout even started, as my eyes were telling me that I was not in my living room, but on top of a mountain with gorgeous vistas. On a basic, human level, seeing is believing, and VR can transport you to another land through visual input alone.

The Boxer Pivots

Liteboxer, founded in 2017, started as a Peloton-like connected fitness company selling a boxing wall mount and an associated workout subscription. 

That’s still one of the company’s core offerings, but spurred by Meta’s major investment in the space, its focus is shifting more and more toward VR.

It’s not hard to see why: 

  • The company’s VR paid subscriber count surpassed two years’ worth of hardware-based subscriptions in one month. 
  • And given that Peloton’s stock has fallen 93.5% from its December 2020 peak, it’s not a great time to be the “Peloton of boxing.”

“A piece of hardware has much lower [subscriber] churn,” Morin explained. “But the cost of acquisition is an order of magnitude higher than that of VR. When I look at where to spend $10 million of marketing dollars, it’s going into VR, because that’s going to be my most profitable [return], but also my quickest turnaround time for that money.”

Morin sees the connected fitness market in a pivot-or-perish moment as companies fight over a diminishing segment of the population that can afford — and has space for — an expensive workout machine and a monthly subscription. 

He added that investors he has spoken to in raising Liteboxer’s Series B round have grown skeptical of connected fitness. The company has raised $26 million to date, per Crunchbase, including a $20 million Series A.

“If you don’t have an ace in your sleeve like we do with VR, you’re probably not going to survive,” said Morin. “You gotta either shift or become extinct.”

Realistic Virtues

There are two main factors keeping VR fitness from exploding into a massive industry. One is that more people need to purchase a VR headset — but fortunately for VR developers, Meta, and its $429.6 billion market cap, are on the case. 

  • As of June 6, 14.8 million Oculus Quest 2 headsets have been sold, according to Francisco Jeronimo, an executive at market analyst IDC. 
  • Meta is working on improvements to its hardware with the goal of making the VR experience as crisp and as real as possible.

The second, more difficult challenge involves the enduring associations of video games with laziness, and exercise with pain.

“There’s this stigma of gaming not being serious,” said Morin. “Meanwhile, gaming has passed the movie industry and the TV entertainment industry in terms of total revenues. The gaming demo[graphic] is mainstream, but it’s not considered mainstream.”

Stanton sees unique power in VR’s potential to keep users interested and make games adaptable to a person’s habits and real-time biometrics.

“We’ll get to the point where you’ll get more engagement, playing longer, for less miserable discomfort, with more efficient movements, because the game will coach you through the mechanism of the gameplay,” he said.

The games that unlock that potential stand to make billions.

They might even convince people they’re getting exercise.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

May 6, 2023; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Red Bull driver Max Verstappen (1) of the Netherlands walks through the garage area following qualifying for the Miami Grand Prix at Miami International Autodrome.

Max Verstappen Is Unstoppable. Is That Hurting F1 With New American Fans?

Formula One could be facing an inevitable plateau in the United States.
Apr 17, 2024; Tempe, Arizona, USA; Arizona Coyotes left wing Lawson Crouse (67) celebrates after scoring a goal during the third period against the Edmonton Oilers at Mullett Arena.

Everything to Know About the Coyotes’ Second Chance at NHL Life

The clock is ticking in order to restart a Phoenix expansion team.

Just Like We Drew It Up? Stadium Renderings Can Excite, Confound, and Anger

During a historic wave of development, drawings wield more power than ever.
The scene in the green room behind the NFL Draft Theater in Detroit on Tuesday, April 23, 2024. Thirteen college players who will be picked in the first round will be waiting in this large room with friends, family, agents and college coaches on Thursday night.

More NFL Draft Prospects Are Staying Home, and TV Networks Are Adjusting

Whether making or missing out on millions, more prospects are staying home.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

How Red Bull Laps the F1 Competition and Builds the Brand

0:00
0:00

Featured Today

Everything You Need To Know About the Legal Attempts To Kill the ACC

Four lawsuits involving the conference, Clemson, and FSU could determine the future.
April 20, 2024

A Bare-Knuckle Fighter Won His Pro Debut. The Far Right Scored a Marketing Win

With Proud Boys sponsoring him, experts say extremist groups will use his success to elevate their ideologies and recruit new believers.
April 7, 2024

Women’s Basketball Finally Has a TV Deal to Match the Excitement. Now What?

A lucrative new media-rights contract could rectify problems of the past, but the future of March Madness media rights is anyone’s guess.
Mar 16, 2024; Washington, D.C., USA; North Carolina State Wolfpack forward DJ Burns Jr. (30) cuts the net after defeating the North Carolina Tar Heels for the ACC Conference Championship at Capital One Arena.
April 6, 2024

How Two College Seniors Helped DJ Burns Cash In on a Final Four Run

Two college seniors are facilitating deals for NC State’s big man.

Careers

Powered By

Careers in Sports

Looking for a new job? Check out these featured listings and search for openings all over the world.
Live Nation
Multiple - USA Careers
Adidas
Multiple - USA Careers
FanDuel
Multiple - USA Careers
Peloton

Peloton Timeline: CEO Changes, Layoffs, Recalls, and Falling Stocks

The company has fallen from grace after roaring success in 2020.
August 10, 2023

Alternative Golf Venues Thriving ‘Off-Course’ By Attracting Younger Players

In 2022, 15.5 million people participated in off-course golf activities. 
October 18, 2023

Peloton To Bring Live Sports To Its Fitness Devices

NBA League Pass will be available to watch on Peloton devices.
Sponsored

Rapid Returns: How Technology Is Getting You Back to Your Seat

How Oracle’s POS technology is helping fans get back to their seats faster.
Nike's group fitness studios follow its Netflix workout streaming deal.
August 3, 2023

Nike Leans Into In-Person Fitness As Lululemon Cuts Back

With fitness classes already on Netflix, Nike now plans in-person studios.
UBS estimates that pickleball injuries have cost Americans $377 million this year.
June 27, 2023

Pickleball Injuries Could Cost U.S. Nearly $400 Million Per Year

UBS estimates that pickleball injuries have cost Americans $377 million this year.
Harry Kane joins Dak Prescott and Dustin Johnson as investors in OxeFit.
June 1, 2023

Harry Kane Invests in OxeFit, Fitness Startup Reaches $45 Million in Funding

Harry Kane joins Dak Prescott and Dustin Johnson as investors in OxeFit.
The huupe "smart" basketball hoop in a gym.
May 23, 2023

Can Basketball Hoops Become Part of the Smart Gym Ecosystem?

Huupe is selling its product to professional and college basketball teams.