The boxing game is the most difficult part of the Wii Sports package to evaluate. It can be the most fun you'll have with the Wii Sports collection, but it's also the sloppiest in execution. It's the only game in the collection to make use of the nunchuk attachment, as the remote and nunchuk control your right and left hands. To guard, you simply place the controllers in front of your face or body, and you tilt them in the appropriate direction to bob and weave. Throwing punches to the face and body is as simple as jabbing straight ahead with the controllers, and you can even throw out a variety of hooks and uppercuts. The problem lies in how the motion sensor detects the positioning of your remotes, and how inaccurate your punches can become once your hands start flying. Basically, boxing matches can degrade into players wildly swinging their hands about as they try to throw punches that constantly miss their mark. You'll try to throw hooks and uppercuts, and instead you'll continue to toss out jabs, unless a lucky punch is recognized. You'll have similar trouble playing the boxing training games, where you have to hit your trainer's mitts, or work the punching bag. Still, regardless of the inaccuracy issues, it remains one of the most fun games in the collection and one that will be a hit at parties.

Much like what Nintendo offered up in Brain Age, Wii Sports has a Wii Fitness mode, where you can test yourself at a variety of sports. You're evaluated on your performance and given a fitness age based on your speed, stamina and balance. There's a monthly calendar that will plot your progress, and with time, you can strive to reach that optimal fitness age. Maybe Chuck Norris should be called in to endorse the Wii, since thirty minutes of boxing, golf and tennis every day could work wonders for improving the fitness level of your average gamer.
Wii Sports is at its best in a group setting, where the familiarity that everyone has with these games makes them incredibly easy to pick up and play. It's a game you can play with your friends and family, and it perfectly highlights the direction that Nintendo is taking with the platform. It's not the best-looking game on the system, and it's definitely not the deepest, but it may well be the most fun. You're not forking over any money for Wii Sports, so consider it the best money you won't spend this year.