Personal Health | PE.com | Southern California News | News for Inland Southern California
Miriam Liddle  |  by www.pe.com. All rights reserved. 7.04 | 0:19

Obesity may be a global epidemic, but it's Obeez City that is spreading out of control in a new DVD game.
The game, called Body Mechanics, teaches youngsters how to avoid being overweight by joining forces with a team of superheroes who battle villains with names such as Col Estorol and Betes II.
The fighting takes place inside the body of Jack Decayd.

If Obeez City is not contained, Jack will die soon, says Neuro, the Yoda-like wise one who narrates the game's story line.
I remember how it started. A few snacks here, a soft drink there, Neuro, speaking in an ominous tone, says during the opening.

And before we knew it, the Evil Coalition of Harm and Disease was threatening us all. ..

. Only you can change how this story ends.
Body Mechanics is the latest in a string of video games that promote more exercise and better eating habits, although this one doesn't actually get kids up and active.

It's more of a teaching tool packaged with an animated movie.
It recently became available in some retail outlets, including Target, Borders, Walgreens and CVS pharmacies.
Viewed as sedentary pastimes, video games, the TV and PC are typically the object of parental finger-waving.


And children are becoming gamers younger than ever -- 2 years old, according to a survey conducted by NPD Group, a market research firm.
With sales in the U.S.

totaling $12.5 billion in 2006, the gaming industry's foothold is firmly planted in American culture -- and so is childhood obesity. Roughly 17 percent of American youngsters are obese, and millions more are overweight, according to the government.


But highly popular active video games like Dance Dance Revolution and gaming consoles such as Nintendo Co.'s Wii and now Body Mechanics may help counter the belief that video games enable teens to lie around and gain weight.
But video games like Body Mechanics have a difficult task, said Dr.

Karen Cullen, with the Children's Nutrition Research Center in Houston.
You can give someone an hour's worth of facts and you'll bore them to death, she said. The games have to be entertaining to compete in the marketplace.


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