Six fitness apps reviewed

Exercise keeps you fit, strengthens your immune system and brightens your mood. Yoga and fitness apps promise an efficient home workout. Let’s put them to the test.

Text: Julie Freudiger

Images: iStock

6 min

31.03.2020

It’s easy to turn your living room into a gym or your office into a yoga studio! There are countless apps on the market to ensure that you don’t have to miss out on sport or yoga despite working from home. Your body and mind will benefit from a stronger immune system, a more positive mood and more restful sleep.

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Fitness apps make working out easier than ever

All you need to work out at home are a smartphone, tablet or PC, a mat and, above all, plenty of motivation. When it comes to exercising alone at home, your inner coach potato may be more vocal than usual. So, I thought maybe fitness apps could help. I chose six to try.

  • Athlagon

    A heavy beat accompanies me through the registration process. Training goals? Parts of the body you want to train? At home or outside? Sports scientists and physiotherapists from Germany developed Athlagon with the aim of further improving personalised home workouts through fitness tests. The test results are used to draw up weekly training plans.

    There’s silence during the exercises – no music, no voices. Just me and the sound of my breathing. My muscles are burning. It’s impossible to cheat, because the next training session is only activated once I’ve completed the current session correctly. I like the videos showing you how to do the individual exercises. However, it’s a shame that Athlagon is visually so similar to Freeletics.  

    • Functions: Performance test, weekly challenges, community so you can compare your results
    • Cost: 3-month subscription for CHF 35   

    Pros: Sports scientists and physiotherapists; available for iOs and Android

    Cons: No warm-ups before tests and training sessions

    Summary: If you like Freeletics, then you’ll like Athlagon, too. It’s a good idea to determine areas you need to improve by testing your performance with the aim of improving your fitness.

    athlagon.com

  • Freeletics

    One of the best-known fitness apps. I’ve heard from colleagues that the training sessions are tough and intensive. To cut to the chase: I can confirm that the hype surrounding Freeletics is justified. The training sessions are relatively compact, lasting between 30 and 60 minutes.  

    The app creates a personal training programme based on my training level, height, weight and training goals. When I add that I’d like to train quietly at home due to my neighbours, the programme adjusts quickly. I like the fact that Freeletics divides each training session into individual parts, such as the warm-up, technique, interval training and cool down, and explains the individual exercises in detail. The training hasn’t really been that tough so far, but the app uses a tracking function to get to know me better with each session and tailor the workouts increasingly to my requirements.

    • Functions: Personalised fitness training, large community to compare results and network, mindset coach for training principles, stress management, sleep and nutrition coach  
    • Cost: Around CHF 40 for a basic monthly subscription increasing to around CHF 100 for an annual subscription with nutrition coach.

    Pros: Personalised training plans that constantly adpat to your training level; the exercises are well explained in videos; the community can be motivating; available for iOs and Android

    Cons: The app could be more user-friendly

    Summary: Freeletics is perfect for people with a specific training goal – lose weight, build muscle, improve endurance – and who are also looking for tips on diet and their mindset.  

    freeletics.com

  • 7 MWC – 7-minute workout

    No time for sport? The developers of the 7-minute workout have done away with this excuse. Twelve exercises each lasting seven minutes should each deliver the same results as jogging for an hour. The scientific principle behind this claim is high intensity interval training (HIIT). The individual exercises are done at a very high intensity for 30 seconds, followed by a break of 10 seconds.

    There are several exercise apps designed along these lines, but I chose “7 MCW”. The app is refreshingly simple with no frills or fancy effects. The exercises are straightforward – jumping jacks, sit ups, lunges. I’m sweating after the first round. I do two more, as recommended. After these I’m out of breath. If you don’t like monotony, alternatives are offered for the individual exercises.  

    • Functions: Exercises, language, length of breaks and duration of exercises can be adjusted individually.
    • Costs: “7 MWC” costs CHF 4 and includes two training packages. After two weeks or one month of training in a row, two additional packages are activated automatically, or you can buy them for CHF 1.

    Pros: Focuses on the essentials; the instructions are clear, and the individual exercises are explained well in text and videos; available in the App Store and Google Play

    Cons: The design of “7 MWC” is not very appealing; and it’s probably not the app for you if you need to be motivated by a trainer, a nice work-out environment or a community.

    Summary: Useful exercises explained well. And you’ve always got time for seven minutes – maybe even 21 minutes.

    7minworkoutapp.net

  • Asana Rebel

    Asana Rebel offers yoga inspired fitness. The app promises “to make you feel sexier and healthier than ever before”. I’m sceptical, but willing to give it a go.

    The sessions are packaged in bite-sized themed units lasting between five and 30 minutes. I’m not convinced by the shortest workouts. There’s no warm-up, the few exercises are taken out of context and done far too fast. Overall, the rhythm of the programme is often too hectic, although I hardly break a sweat doing the “super tough workout”. I also found the speaker irritating. Her instructions are often unclear and the figures of speech don’t always fit. The fact that the workouts are done by fit and beautiful people alongside villa pools and in hip industrial halls means that the fitness app isn’t very relatable.  

    • Functions: Workout recommendations based on your user profile.
    • Costs: A year’s subscription for Asana Rebel costs around CHF 60; a 3-month subscription around CHF 40

    Pros: Stylish settings and short exercise sessions for people with little time.

    Cons: The speaker’s instructions are unclear; the pace is often too fast, the sporting challenge is limited, and some of the exercises are not explained sufficiently.

    Summary: Mixed review. The app may motivate you to get some exercise when you have a spare five minutes. Better than not exercising at all.  

    asanarebel.com

  • Yoga Easy

    Yoga Easy describes itself as “Germany’s best online yoga studio”. It’s certainly the biggest. It offers over 1,000 videos and more than 40 yoga programmes, with around 70 instructors offering courses in all kinds of yoga styles.

    With all this choice, I was worried that I might not know where to start, but I found my feet relatively quickly and found instructors and courses to meet my needs. The broad range of courses on offer was surprisingly easy to navigate and Yoga Easy is straightforward to use. The app offers something for everyone: meditation, beginner workouts, advanced courses, bikini challenge and legs, bums and tums, but also spiritual journeys.  

    The videos of Yoga Easy are as varied as the instructors and styles of yoga themselves: by the sea, at home and in studios – this was a big plus for me.   

    • Functions: Personal training plan, multi-week yoga programmes, articles, recipes. Also works offline. Desktop and app versions
    • Cost: Free 7-day trial (not extended automatically), a monthly subscription for Yoga Easy costs EUR 16, an annual subscription costs EUR 130.

    Pros I love the design of the app, the courses on offer and the professional instructors

    Cons: It takes a while before you find the right instructors and courses for you. Yoga Easy is only available in German 

    Summary: A professional yoga offering that adds a personal touch with well-trained instructors

    yogaeasy.com

  • The Breathing app

    Strictly speaking, breathing isn’t a sport. However, the Breathing app earns a place on this list. If sport and yoga help you feel good and reduce stress, breathing exercises offer an even faster way to relax. Simply put, deep and regular breathing calms the nervous system, which in turn controls the heart rate, blood pressure, digestion and other unconscious bodily functions.  

    I give it a go and set the frequency that feels comfortable to me – breathe in for four counts and out for six – and the duration of the exercise. The minimum duration is a minute. I also choose the way The Breathing app guides me through the exercise to make sure I don’t lose the rhythm. While I concentrate on my breathing, I forget everything around me and really do feel calmer.  

    • Functions: No personalised functions, except the design, duration of exercise
      and breathing frequency.
    • Cost: Free

    Pros: Everything: the idea, the design, the exercises

    Cons: None

    Summary: The perfect app, especially in stressful situations and life phases. Everyone can find a minute just to breathe.  

    Available in the App Store and Google Play.

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