NDS (Nintendo DS) Shop
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Nintendo DS » Action » Let's Yoga  
Categories
Nintendo DS
Nintendo Wii
Narrow your search
Fantasy
Fighting
Horror
Military & Espionage
Sci-Fi
Shooter
Fantasy
Horror
Military & Espionage
Sci-Fi
Shooter
Related Categories
• Action
Nintendo DS
• All Games
Nintendo DS
• Video Games Available for International Shipping
Specialty Stores

Let's Yoga

Let's Yoga
From: Konami
Category: Video Games

List Price: $19.99
Buy New: $19.58
You Save: $0.41 (2%)

Qty 999 In Stock


New (15) Used (3) from $19.58

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 1466

Platform: Nintendo Ds
ESRB: Rating Pending
Media: Video Game
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Batteries Included: No
Operating System: Nintendo DS
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2
Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 4.9 x 0.6

MPN: 24137
Model: 41379
UPC: 083717241379
EAN: 0083717241379
ASIN: B0010HOZNK

Release Date: April 29, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.

Features:
  • get a 360 degree view of each pose using stylus and touch screen
  • Learn up to 80 poses including 20 for sitting at your desk
  • Choose from 3 different avatars with unique costume and mats
  • Build your program based on your everyday ailments

Similar Items:

  • Let's Pilates
  • My Weight Loss Coach
  • Wii Fit
  • My Word Coach
  • Brain Age 2: More Training in Minutes a Day!

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Finding it hard to learn yoga by yourself or with a book? Or you already know some basic yoga but the more difficult poses are hard to do? Then try Let's Yoga. This game makes it so easy to learn yoga that you'll feel like you have your very own personal instructor. You can set your DS down next to you and let the vocal instructions tell you exactly what to do, or just read the subtitles. If you're confused by how to do something, you can always rotate the image on the screen 360 degrees to see all angles of the pose. The vocal instructions will even tell you when to inhale or exhale or you can look at the flower symbols on the screen. You can even combine your favorite poses to create just the right program for you. So start learning yoga today.

Supervised by Konami Sports Club, meaning you'll acquire proper knowledge and self-regulating methods while learning yoga and its poses



Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Great supplement to Wi Fit   July 9, 2008
It took the Wi Fit to finally get me re interested in Yoga. I tried it out a while ago but decided to concentrate my efforts into a more hard core martial arts. Stupid me, I could have done both and been all the better for it. Still after being somewhat adept at the 15 Yoga poses, I felt I needed more and the inexpensive Let's Yoga cart did the trick.

I love Wi Fit Yoga but Let Yoga really adds so much more to the Yoga experience. Wi Fit would be a pretty good comprehensive warm up but Let Yoga would be the real class. I would imagine a typical Yoga class might cost somewhere in the range of 10 to 25 dollars for one session. Well you could do Lets Yoga and then when you are ready for an in person classroom instructor, you will not be lost with all the poses

The Lets Yoga instructor is also pretty good about explaining the poses and the cart allows you to stop the session and reposition the instructor to view from different angles,

an absolute terrific exercise cart.



5 out of 5 stars Great Solution for On-Bus, Waiting Room and Other Spots   June 6, 2008
 8 out of 12 found this review helpful

If you're interested in learning more about yoga, or simply stretching and relaxing, Let's Yoga definitely is software worth owning. From chair stretches to step by step lessons, there's something for everyone here.

You get to customize your "guide" with a variety of hair styles, outfits, colors and signal shapes. There are numerous ways to then use the software.

Starting with the simple, there are a few chair poses that you can do on the bus, in your office, anywhere! They are great stretches and moves that help you stay limber.

Next there is an area of quick "problem solving" poses, broken up into body, mind and beauty. They are relatively brief 3-5 minute combinations of poses. You choose a topic - for example helping swollen feet, or easing cramps, or fighting stress. The system then provides a series of poses to help you with that issue.

You can even ask for random poses to meet a given criteria (raise flexibility) and see what happens!

One of my favorite parts is the area where you make your own combinations. You can draw from every single part of the yoga library. You can put together a stress-free relaxation set, a high intensity workout, or anything in between.

If you're new to yoga, their poses area goes step by step through each pose. You can zoom in and out on the video, back up, pause. You can get easier ways to do the pose, and tips on how to do it well. They even show which muscles are helped by the pose.

Once you're ready with the basics, there is a multi part class laid out. For each stage of the class you get a lesson and then a series of poses to practice.

There is a wealth of great information here, but there are some down sides. First, the inherent problem is the small DS screen. You're trying to do poses that involve standing, sitting, and lying down. All the while you're trying to peer at this tiny screen to see what to do. A DVD does a MUCH better job in this regard. However, for all the times you're not somewhere that you have a DVD available, this is certainly an OK option. You just need to watch it a few times so you know what she's doing, rather than having to try to hold and watch your DS while you move.

Next, the speaker goes rather rapidly through the moves. You are told to kneel, then instantly to move into plank, then instantly to move into another pose. It is hard to keep up. In most yoga progressions they are smooth and orderly. The pace is quick, and the dialogue is clipped. There is a pause button - but the chance of grabbing it easily while doing poses is slim. They could have used much better pacing on this.

There are written words which also guide you through the lessons, but sometimes they cover up what the woman is doing, so it's a mixed benefit.

The manual is impressively thorough in a world where most manuals are a four-page warning about flashing lights. That being said, they do a paragraph of English, then one of French, the one of English and so on. You have to hopscotch your way through the instructions.

Still, all being said, it's great at what it can offer. Like I said, if you are waiting in line, or hanging out at a doctor's office, or stuck on a bus or train, this can be perfect. Anywhere that there isn't a DVD available, and you had no other option, this is certainly a good fallback.

So to summarize, make sure you have some DVDs for actual working out. But as a stop-gap for other times, this game works nicely.



4 out of 5 stars A fun, easy way to enjoy a little yoga!   May 15, 2008
 13 out of 13 found this review helpful

I'm a yoga instructor (also teach Pilates) and while this is no replacement for a live class or teacher, it is a really cute, fun game! I was very skeptical of how it was going to describe/demo the poses and practices, but I must say I am very pleased. The little avatar actually demonstrates the poses (as well as how to get in and out of them) quite safely, plus there is a lot of good detail. There is even an option to explore the poses individually in even more detail, rotating the avatar using the stylus in order to see it from any angle. The vocal guidance is nicely descriptive without being too repetitive, and the narrator's voice is very neutral and pleasant. I love how they guide your breath with both the use of sound and a very light growing/shrinking mandala. I've found everything about it very relaxing and fun!

Some drawbacks that keep it from being a 5-star game: it does not offer any modifications or easier/harder versions of poses, which almost every student will need for at least a few poses. I can understand why this would be difficult to build into a game like this, but that's one of the reasons that it's best to start with a live teacher. For the short practices, rather than flowing from one pose into the other it always goes back to the starting position - I understand this from a programming perspective as well, but it's still a slight drawback. The only other thing I must mention is that some of the practice titles and descriptions are almost comical, which I can only attribute to it having been translated from the original game in Japanese. What the heck is a "yoggy" anyway? LOL! That said, they still offer asana names in English AND Sanskrit which is pretty helpful and useful.

While longer practices are very effective, the game's MANY options for short practices (some as short as 3 minutes) allow you to squeeze in a little peace and yoga into any break you have in your day. There are even several options for Chair Yoga to do at your desk! After all, any yoga is better than no yoga! Who couldn't afford to spend 3 minutes to get more relaxed and clear-minded during the day?

It is not perfect nor is it a comprehensive way to learn all there is to know about yoga, but for the price and the format it is MUCH better than I expected. Highly recommended for casual and hardcore yoga fans!


Qty 999 In Stock


Web Hosting & Domain Registration

Partner Sites

BluRay Movies & Players
Nintendo Wii
DVDs for Babies
Jeep Wrangler Accessories
Network Monitoring
DSS - Dish Accessories
Gourmet Food
Plasma TV Sales
Vacations