Games Controlled By An Exercise Bike
Fidigit writes "I know that most people reading this won't be _that_ interested in exercise, but given there's tech with it ... What do you think about computer games controlled by an exercise bike in your house?
It sounds crazy, but it might just work." Update: 01/14 00:14 GMT by T : An anonymous reader points to another example of the same concept.
This has been done several times before. For instance, there is this SNES/Sega/PC/whatever else you want bike which is basically a fancy looking controller and then there's this SNES specific bike, the Life Cycle which I recall being issues in some back issue of Nintendo Power. I think there was even a Pacman-esque game that was supposed to go with it.
You like splinters in your crotch? -Jon Caldara
See here for a commercially-available product for interfacing turbo trainers and Playstation (2)s that has been around for a while...
Read more about it here.
-Bryan
free ipod? yeah.
I have been using the http://www.exertris.com/>Exertris for over a year know... Its Great. I personally find exercise quite boring but this does help me get through. The problem is that the number of games are limited.
You can take a tour at the website to see if one is right for you...
I've always dreamed of a home port of Prop Cycle...kind of like N64 PilotWings that the guy mentioned. I like the idea of exploring, it seems like races are too dependent on wherever the computer decides to handicap you.
SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
One example of an arcade game employing a stationary bike was Prop Cycle from Namco. You flew a pedal-powered flying bicycle around, running into balloons and flying through hazards to score points.
I thought it was whimsical and a lot of fun, but it never showed up at many arcades.
Schwab
Editor, A1-AAA AmeriCaptions
I know this story says *computer* games, but it appears some of the posters here haven't been to an arcade in a while..
.. That hurt too.
.. 8 of those horses side by side... Way fun.
:)
There is a downhill bike game now, which is way fun. You get done, you're hurting.
Anyone ever see that two-person rafting game?
The horse-racing game?
The new motion-cap (I guess this is what you'd call them) games are WILD too -- there's this one that you stand in this one place and hold a gun - and to duck around corners to fire, well, you duck around a corner. If you need to drop to the floor to avoid gunfire, you drop to the floor. I didn't think it would be that much of exercise, but wow.
At home - I've fallen in love with DDRMax on the PS2. I have two of the hard dance platforms now -- it's the most exercise (aerobic) I've gotten in a long time. When my friends come over - it's turned on automatically - huge party hit. Mix beer with it, it gets really fun.
Ok - ramble stops now. I just love video games.
I can vouch for that. I use DDR as my main form of exercise (of course, before that, I did nothing). An hour of marginally difficult DDR tunes is a great workout. There's lots of motion, balance, and jumping around like a dork involved. I recommend it to anybody who can't stand doing traditional exercise due to boredom.
As far as the bicycle gaming goes, I believe I saw a special VCR arrangement that would play at a video at a speed proportional to the speed you were pedalling at. This was about 10 years ago. I can't remember where I saw it, but basically, they would play a recording of a camera duct-taped to a bicycle.
Also, there's an arcade game called Prop Cycle where you are flying around on a winged, propeller-powered bicycle. You not only need to pedal a bicycle to control your speed, but you have to steer, pull up and down, and lean side to side (not sure about that last one, but it happens anyway!).
I'd take Prop Cycle over an exercycle any day!
Karma: Chameleon (Mostly affected by the 1980s)
Prop Cycle, which came out under a couple of other names too, was my favorite excercise game. I used to play it a lot at the local arcade. Much more fun than any other excercise I have gotten. By far the best arcade game with serious excercise involved. Too bad it didnt include a multiplayer mode, deathmatch (with little guns on the cycle) would have been amazing fun.
The second model I bought was the Eloton SimCycle along with its GameBox accessory. This lets you plug the SimCycle into a gameport as the Y-Axis, shared with another gameport controller. This finally offered the experience I wanted.
It's a matter of trial and error to find games that let you configure the Y-Axis as your speed or throttle. The reaction of the PC to changes in your pedaling speed is not instantaneous. I'd estimate there to be a .7 seconds delay. So it's best to use it in games where you are usually going forward but you would like to vary the speed. That generally means racing and flight sims. With a FPS like Unreal it's just not precise enough.
Some of the games I've found to work well are:
Most importantly, it works very well with Battlefield 1942, controlling my forward motion whether I'm an infantryman or driving a vehicle. In fact, because Battlefield 1942 is such an addicting game, I've been getting a lot of exercise lately! I like it a lot.
try
eloton - minimal
exergame
fitcentric
cyclefx
velotron
graber
reality keeps interfering with my plans for world domination.
looks like we're still an integration of all the required variables away. close though. 1 year maybe. (ignoring that this still includes no tilt sensing, and no force feedback. ahem)
well, we still don't have pc's capable of playing unreal within the myst world. so...
.
. hmmm
The i-Magic virtual reality cycle turbo trainer has started appearing in the cycling press over the last year or so. Details at:-
Tacx web site
This is not aimed at the game player, and rather more at the hard core cyclist who wants to train in the winter, but the principle is the same.