Fitness Game -v1.0- — -yulika3k-

Yulika3k has a background in utility software, and it shows. The menus are stark, black-and-cyan text with zero fluff. You click "Start," calibrate your skeleton, and go. There are no loot boxes, no social feeds, no "energy timers." It’s refreshingly anti-mobile-game.

For a v1.0 release from a solo dev (Yulika3k), the idea is genuinely fresh—mixing the punishing rhythm of DDR with the full-body chaos of calisthenics. 1. Surprisingly Effective Calorie Burn Make no mistake: this is not a casual game. In the "Overdrive" mode, I averaged 12 squats, 8 side lunges, and 30 high-knees per 90-second round. My heart rate hit 150 BPM within 10 minutes. If you treat it like a HIIT workout, you will sweat through your shirt. Fitness Game -v1.0- -Yulika3k-

If Yulika3k adds camera smoothing, a basic warm-up guide, and fixes the ghost UI, this could easily become a 4.5-star staple in my weekly rotation. Until then? Stretch before you play, keep the lights on, and prepare to curse at your own shadow. Yulika3k has a background in utility software, and it shows

PC (with webcam) & Mobile (tested on Android) Time Spent: 8 hours over 10 days The Core Concept Yulika3k’s Fitness Game - v1.0 isn't trying to be Ring Fit Adventure or Beat Saber . Instead, it strips the genre down to its rawest form: a low-poly, neon-drenched arcade where your body is the only controller. The premise is simple: "Move or Lose." You stand in front of your screen, and the game tracks your joint movement to dodge obstacles, collect "Energy Orbs," and maintain a combo chain. There are no loot boxes, no social feeds, no "energy timers

A Promising但 Flawed First Sweat: Yulika3k’s “Fitness Game - v1.0” is an Ambitious Arcade Workout

The game drops you into a grey void with text: "Move body. Hit orbs." That’s it. There’s no explanation of the scoring system (what’s a "Perfect" vs "Good" move?), no warm-up routine, and no cooldown. I pulled a hamstring on day 3 because I jumped into "Expert" mode without stretching. A fitness game that doesn't prompt a warm-up is borderline irresponsible.