Funfitland vs Supernatural VR: Honest Comparison After Testing Both

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Like many of you, I fell in love with Supernatural VR. When I heard the news it would stop getting updates and basically go into maintenance mode, I was crushed. You can still use it and you still have hundreds of playlists to choose from, but no new content is coming. I already wrote my full Supernatural review (here’s the link), so this is not about that. This is a depth review of Funfitland vs Supernatural VR after I tested the 14-day trial of funfitland, took pictures, and recorded videos. You might see some comparisons to my favorite app, Supernatural. Let’s dive in. The focus will be more on Funfitland.

Funfitland has almost the same options as Supernatural, but just less modern. No wow factor. Check my two videos side by side where I did a 360-degree turn in each app. The difference is immediate. Supernatural feels polished and premium. Funfitland feels younger, still finding its style.


The Brother Metaphor

Funfitland has three modes: Combat Fit, Groove Fit, and Flow Fit. If you have used Supernatural VR, you will see something familiar. To help explain each section, I am comparing them to a family of brothers, if that makes sense. 

Funfitland has 3 brothers:

  • Combat Fit: 20-year-old trying to be better than big brother
  • Groove Fit: 14-year-old brother with lots of energy, just wants to have fun
  • Flow Fit: 16-year-old with the dance moves

Supernatural is the big brother. He is in his late 30s. He has done it all. He is there to train hard and make a difference. It is okay to have fun, but you need goals.

They all look up to the big brother. They want to be him. Maybe they will eventually, but not today.

The big brother is my hero.


Combat Fit vs Supernatural vr Boxing: The 20-Year-Old Brother Trying to Prove Himself

Combat Fit is clearly inspired by the boxing experience that made Supernatural popular. The fundamentals are there. You throw uppercuts, hooks, jabs, and defensive movements. There is even a High Punch option. Mechanically, it works. You sweat, you move your core, and you feel engaged throughout the session.

Where it shines is in the basics. The coaches look fit and capable, and they give useful cues that encourage proper form. You receive an accuracy score at the end, which adds structure. Where it falls short is in deeper accountability. There is no detailed punch breakdown, no visible speed stats, and no strong leaderboard presence. The feedback feels lighter. Without recognizable music to elevate the moment, the emotional impact never quite reaches the same level.

My experience: when you first get into the stance, it feels just like Supernatural. Then the music starts. Very generic. I like the orbs from Supernatural. In Funfitland, that high punch does not fit for me. It is like punching a 7-foot guy, which does not make sense to me. I do like the pads in Funfitland. They are very accessible, and the colors are bright, one aspect of supernatural that lacks in my opinion. White Background, with White Orbs coming at you, sometimes its hard too see, but for me, i get use to it. 

It comes down to this: would I do this for a 6-month period? The answer is no. Supernatural? Yes. I have done it for 2 years straight and counting. I feel I would just get tired of it. It is close. It is just not at the level of Supernatural Boxing.

Will watched me test Combat Fit and said: “The 20-year-old is trying hard.” He is not wrong.

Combat Fit rating: 8 out of 10
Supernatural Boxing: 10 out of 10


Groove Fit vs Supernatural vr: The 14-Year-Old Brother

Groove Fit feels designed for movement and fun rather than grit and intensity. You are touching pads, dancing, following rhythm, and staying active. It lowers the intimidation factor immediately. The environment is colorful and inviting, and it feels accessible for people who might be nervous about jumping into a serious fitness app.

For teens, families, and beginners, this could be fantastic. It keeps people moving and removes pressure. For me, at 49, it felt a little too safe. I chose a Hip Hop playlist hoping for energy and edge, but the music felt generic and emotionally flat. I respect what it is trying to do, but it did not push me in the way I personally need to stay consistent.

Honestly, the dancing part is not for me. Listen, when I am here, I am here to work. I just feel with this one you are just moving, but not really with a goal in mind. I know the goal is to have fun. I am all for it, but not for me.

Will tried Groove Fit once. He said it was “too much dancing, not enough dam building.” Beavers have priorities.

Groove Fit rating: 6 out of 10


Flow Fit vs Supernatural vr: The 16-Year-Old Brother

Flow Fit sits somewhere in the middle between playful and performance-focused. In Supernatural’s Flow workouts, you use bats, which gives a visual and physical sense of impact. In Funfitland, you use your open hands. It is visually clean and you can clearly track your contact with targets, which is a positive.

However, the lack of gloves or equipment reduces that striking sensation. It feels more like tapping than hitting. Again, the playlist I selected lacked recognizable energy, and without strong music driving the rhythm, the experience felt polished but emotionally flat. It works mechanically, but it did not grab me. It has a heptic feedback, so thats good.

I never got into Flow in Supernatural, so I knew I would not like this. But I wanted to try it. As soon as it started, I thought: no bats, just my hands? Okay. I just did not get into it. I know the goal is to move your body, and for that, 100%, it does that.

Flow Fit rating: 7 out of 10


Pictures section

Here are a few pictures i took inside the headset


What I Use for VR Fitness (Works with Both)

Whether using Supernatural (while it lasts) or testing Funfitland, here is what makes VR fitness sustainable for me.

The app does not matter as much as the setup. Consistency beats everything.

Your 6 core products with Amazon links:

  • Quest 2 / Quest 3 – Works with both Supernatural and Funfitland

Its pretty close to what I have

Its pretty close to what I have

  • Microfiber Cloth – Essential after serious sweat sessions (Combat Fit gets intense)
  • Floor Fan – Prevents fogging during Groove Fit or Flow workouts
  • KIWI GRIPS – these are my best investement, I love Kiwi products, these grips feel nice.

Will says even younger brothers need proper training equipment. Big brother taught him that.


The Big Brother vs The Younger Brothers

Supernatural feels experienced and disciplined. When you stand on the opening platform, it feels serious. The environments are dramatic, the music hits hard, and the coach looks at you like they expect effort. There is a sense of accountability that builds over time, which makes consistency easier.

Funfitland feels optimistic and energetic. It wants you to enjoy yourself first and sweat second. There is less pressure and less intensity. For many people, that lighter atmosphere might actually be better. For me, consistency comes from being pushed. When an app makes you grunt, you know it is working.

360 degree of Funfitland home page

360 degree of Supernatural home page

Watch the environments from each. Supernatural feels dramatic and serious. Funfitland feels bright and energetic. Both work. Different vibes.


The Coaches

Funfitland’s coaches look fit and knowledgeable. Their instructions are clear and practical, and there is nothing negative to say about their presence. They guide you through the movements and maintain a positive tone throughout the workouts. Honestly, I thought they were AI at first, but nope, real people. They look very fit and they have a positive tone.

That said, Supernatural built a deeper emotional connection for me over two years. My favorite coach, Leanne, delivered sessions that felt personal and focused. Even now, as Supernatural moves into maintenance mode with no new playlists or updates planned, the existing workouts still feel premium. The intensity, environment, music, and accountability remain unmatched.


Would I Subscribe?

If I had to choose today, Supernatural keeps my yearly membership. It still delivers the serious training atmosphere that motivates me to show up consistently. Even after testing Funfitland, going back into a Supernatural electronic playlist reminded me why I stayed for two years.

Funfitland is not a bad app. It looks good, the mechanics work, and the intention is solid. But it did not give me that wow factor. It did not create that feeling of stepping into something bigger than myself. I would likely cancel before the trial ends, not out of criticism, but because it does not match the intensity I look for.


Final Thoughts

Funfitland is not a cheap imitation. It feels like a younger sibling in the same fitness family. Combat Fit shows real promise. Groove Fit will appeal to younger or more casual users. Flow Fit works for people who enjoy rhythmic movement without heavy intensity.

For someone new to VR fitness, Funfitland might be less intimidating and easier to stick with. For someone like me, who has trained consistently in Supernatural for two years, it feels like stepping down in intensity.

VR fitness matters. Both apps are helping people move. But right now, the big brother still wins.


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