SoulCycle's at

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发布时间:2024-10-19 观看次数:14607
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    This is going to sound obvious but I'm going to say it anyway: SoulCycle's at-home spinning bike would be great if you absolutely love SoulCycle.

    But you've got to understand that people who love SoulCycle capital-L Love SoulCycle. It's been compared to a cult more than once. There's a reason. Soul, which is a part of the larger fitness company the Equinox Group, is a particularbrandof spinning.

    You know what I mean if you've ever been to a studio class — you know, back when that was a reasonable thing to do. There's impossibly loud music, a dark room, scented candles, coordinated movements, and an instructor who both guides your ride and (typically) proselytizes through a mix of spiritual talk/therapy-ish advice/motivational quotes.

    In short: If that's your bag — if that's what you think about when you think about spinning – the SoulCycle at-home bike does a pretty good job of delivering. I tested it out for about two weeks, trying out its different features. The simple report: It's a really nice, if quite pricey, spinning bike. The product will never be exactly like the in-studio offering, but the company clearly tried to capture that feeling for their in-home product.

    But now we have to talk about the elephant in the room: Peloton. The pandemic has rocketed Peloton's popularity, with scores of people looking for a great workout without leaving home. It's kinda-sorta the standard for at-home spinning.

    And full disclosure: I'm one of those recent Peloton buyers – my fiancée and I purchased a Peloton, which happened to arrive about two weeks before I got to test out SoulCycle's at-home bike. To be clear, our purchase wasn't out of some massive loyalty to Peloton. In fact, we'd never ridden a real one and my fiancée was previously a regular attendee of Soul classes. We simply live in a small NYC apartment and wanted a way to workout at home. We eventually purchased the Peloton after doing research and feeling more comfortable buying an expensive product from a company solely focused on the at-home experience.

    On to the obvious question: Which do I like better? After riding the SoulCycle for a few weeks, I'd say it's a really good product, but, in my opinion, Peloton does lots of things about ten percent better. Its pedaling is smoother, the bike is sturdier, and it's easier to adjust settings between multiple riders. Peloton's user interface is better, its backlog of classes is far more robust, and its filming style/instruction is better geared to the at-home rider versus a person in the studio. I'd also argue Peloton gives you a harder workout compared to SoulCycle because its focus is on material, numerical goals compared.

    Phew, OK, that's out of the way. This is a SoulCycle review, after all, even if the Peloton comparisons are inevitable. While I've shared the gist of my impression of the SoulCycle bike, let's dig a bit deeper.

    Mashable ImageMy mini spin studio in my one-bedroom apartment. Not pictured: Me standing on my bed to take this photo.Credit: Tim Marcin / Mashable

    As close as you'll get to a SoulCycle studio without being there

    I rode the SoulCycle bike nearly every day since getting it, testing out a dozen or so rides. Rides came in a range of difficulty and lasted from 20 to 90 minutes. The difficulty isn't really about how hard the pedaling is, but rather the level of choreography. If you've done a studio Soul class, then you know it's full of movements: tapping your butt back, dipping, pushups, hands in and out, etc. It can be a lot, so if you're brand new to that style of riding, it's easiest to dip your toes before diving headlong into the dancing.

    But that actually might the SoulCycle bike's best selling point. Soul has its own brand of cycling, and if it appeals to you, there's nothing else like it.

    Peloton, for instance, focuses intently on your pedal strokes, there's constant direction from the instructor regarding your speed and resistance, and each ride has a "output" score to let you know how hard you worked. I personally enjoy that and have found the constant numbers a useful motivation tool. However, that's not for everyone! There are some Peloton instructors who borrow from Soul a bit, but there it is still nothing like SoulCycle. Not even close. Peloton is more about cycling, whereas Soul is its own brand of spinning and dancing.

    Mashable ImageA quick GIF of what a class looks like.Credit: Soulcycle

    And to be clear: I'm not criticizing SoulCycle. The experience can be really fun. For instance, I thoroughly enjoyed my local studio's Emo Night ride with my favorite instructor (shouts to Sam Bilinkas) before the pandemic hit. And, in a post vaccine world, I could see myself going back despite owning an at-home bike.

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    SoulCycle's at-home bike is clearly aimed at those Soul diehards. It's still a great workout and they really did their damndest to create the studio vibe at home.

    For instance:

    I contest Peloton (and maybe other bikes I haven't tried) give you a better workout. It pushes you to go harder, to chase down your previous performances. But, to be honest, some days I was just really tired. Daily riding, coupled with work and a pandemic, left me drained. It was kind of nice that SoulCycle allowed me to ride without seeing, in dire numeric terms, how much worse my performance was. Some days getting on the bike is about all you can manage and that's fine. That's something that Soul clearly wanted to drill home.

    The bike itself

    Let's get this out of the way: The bike ain't cheap. It starts at $2,500, which does not include the $40 per month you'll need to pay for the Variis membership that powers the classes. To be fair, that membership comes with lots of other useful workouts and classes you can do at home, but we're talking about the bike here. And now through November 30 there's a holiday bundle that will throw-in a Theragun massager, weights, a mat, and a candle for free.

    For comparison's sake, the first-generation Peloton — the one I have — starts at $1895 and does a fair number of things better. The newest Peloton, which added features like a rotating screen, more speakers, and auto-adjusting resistance starts at $2,495.

    As a now frequent at-home cycler, here are a few takeaways about the bike:

    In short: It's a really good machine. It's pretty sleek looking, although I'd argue it has a bit bulkier profile than the Peloton. I can't tell you how to spend $2,500 — that's a lot of cash — but if you were a Soul person in the Before Times, then you will not be disappointed by this bike. It's effectively the same, which means it's quite nice.

    What's lacking

    SoulCycle is new to the at-home game. The brand's whole thing — the reason it's been compared to a cult — is the vibeat the workouts, the communal feeling that inspires people to come back again and again. You can take a spinning class anywhere but a SoulCycle class, for better or worse depending on your taste, is distinct.

    SoulCycle retrofitted an at-home product to its studio offering, whereas something like Peloton built its product to primarily be used in the home.

    That in mind, SoulCycle's at-home product has some hiccups. Try as you might, at-home will never fully be in-studio. That's not Soul's fault but it's just a fact.

    Peloton, for instance, has focused its spinning on the person at home. Instructors call out milestone rides and give specific numbers to hit. The screen displays your speed and resistance compared to what the instructor asked for, and the app tracks your personal-record rides.

    Soul, on the other had, displays your speed and power but there are no specific benchmarks to hit. I likehaving benchmarks to chase, others might not. The instructors at SoulCycle are good. But I found them often talking to the riders in the room, rather than me at home. Peloton instructors talk right to the camera, the shot zoomed into them so it's like they're talking directly to you. SoulCycle often tries to place to you in the studio, the camera sweeping around, the instructor developing rapport with the riders in the room. That's all well and good, but to be honest I didn't much care about that riders in the room or feeling like I was in the middle row.

    Mashable ImageA sample of what an at-home Soul Cycle homescreen looks like.Credit: Soulcycle

    SoulCycle's product is incredibly new, which means the library of classes is only a few hundred deep. Peloton, for instance, has thousands and thousands of classes that range from five to ninety minutes long. And while you can filter at-home SoulCycle rides by music type, instructor, and difficulty, I missed being able to see what kind of ride I was signing up for. Soul classes are titled new-agey things "Just Feel It" or "Stay Present." I often found myself wondering OK but what does that mean? Is it an interval ride, a climb?

    Live Soul rides had a few hiccups as well. While riding at an assigned time, the studio live-streamed to your bike, is pretty neat, they're not super frequent. And the experience isn't finely tuned just yet. Again, the instructors sometimes focused more on the people they could see than the hundreds out in the internet ether. One live class I took, the instructor started the class by tiredly putting his shoes on, facing away from the camera. Another class ended before the 45-minute mark it was supposed to close, so I had to sit around and wait a few minutes for the stream to automatically end in order for it to be saved to my profile.

    Mashable ImageHere's a picture of my ride in the middle of a live class. Excuse the blurriness, it was a fast picture during a long, tiring ride.Credit: Tim Marcin / Mashable

    Peloton also really sells its leaderboard system, which stacks you up against every other rider in the class. SoulCycle lets you see how many people are taking the class, but you're not competing. That's a huge plus for some, a drawback for others. To be fair, these were not huge problems, but were nonetheless hiccups on a very expensive bike.

    The TL;DR

    The SoulCycle at-home bike is a good, if pricey, product that might be indispensable for the true Soul diehards out there. I enjoyed riding the bike. Ultimately, I felt that if I'm going to pony up that much cash, then the Peloton is better at too many things to justify buying the SoulCycle bike. But that might be more a question of what you want out of a ride, then anything the Soul bike does wrong.

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