Feature 07

Battles

Settle it with one uncut attempt

Choose a challenge such as push-ups, pull-ups, an AMRAP lift, a plank, or a rowing test. Both athletes get the same rules and proof requirements, including one continuous attempt with no edits or speed changes. Submit the video in Forjex, review the result, and keep the full head-to-head history on each profile.

Battles in the Forjex app

Overview

Head-to-head fitness challenges with the same rules for both sides

A battle starts with a challenge that can be filmed and judged: maximum push-ups, an AMRAP lift at an agreed load, a plank hold, a Concept2 row, or another supported strength or conditioning test. The challenger and opponent receive the same standard, deadline, and proof requirements before either submission is scored.

Proof is one continuous attempt. The full movement has to stay visible, and the video cannot be cut, sped up, or stitched together. Forjex keeps the invite, acceptance, evidence, result, rematch, and head-to-head record in one flow so the competition does not depend on a caption or a number typed after the fact.

01

1v1 strength, conditioning, and bodyweight challenges

02

Shared rules and proof requirements for both athletes

03

Uncut proof-video submissions

04

AI-assisted judging with a visible result

05

Head-to-head profiles and battle history

06

Leaderboards and rematches after the result

Battles connected to another Forjex workflow

How it works

Challenge, prove, settle it

Battles make the rules visible before the attempt and keep the submitted evidence attached to the result.

  1. 01

    Choose the test

    Pick a supported challenge, opponent, rules, load or target where required, and a deadline for both attempts.

  2. 02

    Submit one uncut attempt

    Film the full movement in one continuous video with no edits or speed changes, then submit it as the battle proof.

  3. 03

    Review the result

    AI-assisted judging applies the shared standard, publishes the outcome, and adds it to battle history and relevant leaderboards.

Inside the feature

Competition built around visible evidence

The battle format is specific enough to judge, flexible enough for several training styles, and clear about what counts before recording starts.

01

Challenge formats

Strength, bodyweight, holds, and conditioning

Supported templates include push-ups, pull-ups, sit-ups, burpees, dips, air squats, loaded AMRAP tests, planks, hollow holds, wall sits, rowing challenges, wall balls, box jumps, and other defined tests.

Each template carries the rules needed for that movement, including range, load, time, or equipment where relevant.

02

Proof

One attempt, one video, no edits

The proof guidance asks athletes to keep the full attempt and relevant body position visible from start to finish. Editing, speed changes, or combining clips breaks the evidence chain.

Both sides see the requirements before accepting, which makes the standard part of the challenge rather than an argument after the result.

03

Judging

Apply the same movement standard to both attempts

AI-assisted judging reviews the proof against the selected challenge. The result belongs to the battle record rather than being reduced to an unsupported score typed into a post.

The evidence and state changes remain visible through invite, acceptance, submission, and result, including honest pending or failed states when a battle is not ready to resolve.

04

Rivalries

Keep the head-to-head record after one result

Battle history and head-to-head profiles preserve wins, losses, opponents, and rematches. Relevant leaderboards give the result a wider competitive context.

Squads can use the same proof-first idea for team challenges, while individual battles stay focused on a direct opponent and a defined test.

Questions

Battles, explained

The practical details people usually want before adding another fitness app to their routine.

What kinds of fitness battles can I create?

Forjex supports defined strength, bodyweight, hold, and conditioning challenges, including repetition tests, loaded AMRAPs, planks, rowing, wall balls, and box jumps.

What proof does a battle require?

The attempt must be submitted as one continuous video with the full movement visible and no edits, cuts, or speed changes.

Can I accept or decline a battle invite?

Yes. Battle invites have an explicit accept or decline flow before the challenge moves into the proof stage.

Does Forjex keep a head-to-head battle history?

Yes. Results can appear in battle history, head-to-head profiles, rematches, and relevant leaderboards.

Pre-launch

Put battles in the same place as the rest of your training

Forjex is launching on iOS first. Join the waitlist and we’ll tell you when it is ready to use.

Join the waitlist