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Review / From Geocaching to Pokémon Go: The 7 best walking apps for people who hate fitness apps – and walking

Do you hate walking too?
Do you hate walking too?

STYLE’s office couch potato (reluctantly) tries out Stepbet, Walkr, Harry Potter: Wizards Unite and 4 more mobile phone apps which use AR, prizes, bribes and bets to entice you off the sofa

If it were up to me, I would lie on the couch and play games all day – I have perfected what my husband calls the fine art of “smushing”.

The problem with most fitness apps is that they’re too boring

Alas, an office job and a penchant for pizza force me to move around for the sake of a pay cheque and what one might loosely term “health”, and this summer I figured I might as well download apps that would help me reach a daily target of 10,000 steps – the widely accepted standard if fitness trackers are anything to go by.

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The problem with most pedometer or step-tracking fitness apps – Fitbit, Garmin, Google Fit, Samsung Health, Huawei Health, MyFitnessPal, etc – is that they can sometimes require linking to accessories that you don’t possess. And, more importantly, they’re too fitness-driven, too healthy, too perky. Too boring.

I have therefore spent hours on the couch researching and installing free fitness apps that are masquerading as games, and will get you moving – however reluctantly – for the sake of treasure, a new planet, actual money, or a unicorn.

Geocaching – for adventurers

This is not my favourite, primarily because it requires me to actually go places. Geocaching has been around for a while, but to those new to the scene, it’s essentially a treasure hunt for grown-ups.

I’m tempted to take a taxi there, but that would defeat the purpose

The app takes your phone’s GPS location and pulls up a map with dozens of real-life “caches” marked. These tend to be sealable boxes filled with “treasure” in the form of assorted knick-knacks, a logbook, and potentially a “travel bug” – an item with a trackable tag, which someone leaves behind with the hope that it will be carried around the city, or even the world, by “geocachers” or hitchhikers.

Step one: Choose a “cache”
Step one: Choose a “cache”
Jacqueline Tsang is the former chief editor of STYLE and former content director of Specialist Publications at the South China Morning Post. Her areas of expertise include luxury, fashion, watch, jewellery, F&B, beauty, hospitality and travel.