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Nike and Hyperice's $900 ‘Recovery’ Boot Lives Up to the Hype
Product Reviews

Nike and Hyperice’s $900 ‘Recovery’ Boot Lives Up to the Hype

by admin June 19, 2025


If you’re an athlete, then you remember all too well that the time between 2015 and 2020 was when recovery tools really took over. While hard to believe, there was, in fact, a time when a hard workout or a weekend long run didn’t end with a session in Normatec Legs or a bout with a massage gun. But in 2025, athletes of all ranges, from pro to amateur level, and in nearly every sport, have made recovery a key component of their training. In line with this notion are the novel tech and tools that athletes now have access to. Think Normatec boots and Hyperice massage guns, yes, but also at-home portable cupping, red light therapy, TENS (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation) devices, and infrared sauna blankets, to name just a few. The latest in this lineup is the Hyperboot, an extremely high-tech pair of recovery boots that are priced at $899.

The Hyperboot is somewhat of a mashup between an ultra-comfy and supportive recovery shoe—which many sportswear companies have released in the past several years—and a compression boot, but one specifically designed to provide recovery support to the foot and ankle. They’re a collaboration between Nike, which is responsible for the bulk of the shoe design, including the mid and outer soles, and Hyperice, a company that makes high-end recovery tools for athletes.

Hyperice x Nike Hyperboot

Nike and Hyperice’s Hyperboots will make your feet feel fresh and relaxed after working out, but $900 is steep for the specialized recovery shoes.

Pros

  • Remarkably relaxing
  • Easy setup
  • TSA-approved for carry-on

Cons

  • Bulky, weird-looking
  • Very expensive

What Do They Do and Why Do They Look So Weird?

The Hyperboot is not discreet. They are big and bulky and look like they are meant to accompany an astronaut on a moonwalk. Though by now, most runners, casual and professional, are used to colossal-sized running shoes, these are larger still—and by a lot. The reason for the chunkiness, and the secret sauce of these recovery shoes, is that they have the same built-in air compression technology that you’ll find in the Normatec boots (Hyperice bought Normatec in 2020).

Better known as intermittent pneumatic compression (IPC) devices, they use a system of air pumps and chambers to inflate and deflate in a regularly repeating pattern. The idea behind this is that by expanding and collapsing in a systematic way, blood flow and the movement of lymphatic fluid increases, allowing for better circulation and removal of waste, and, theoretically, faster recovery—all while you are seated, resting and relaxing.

© Raymond Wong / Gizmodo

In addition to this squeezing technology, the Hyperboot added one more feature: heat. While you are getting your feet and ankles squeezed, the device heats up. Because heat is known to relax muscles, adding it in with the compression technology should enable even more blood flow and fluid movement; also, heat just feels really nice.

What Do the Boots Feel Like?

Unfortunately, I don’t hate them. I say unfortunately because truly, who actually wants to fall in love with a $900 recovery shoe?

Unlike the Normatec boots or similar compression sleeves from other brands, the Hyperboot is meant to be both a recovery and warm-up device, meaning that to get the most benefits from them, the shoes should be worn both before and after a workout. Runners and other athletes often fall into three camps: they are warm-up stans, recovery devotees, or both. I fall into the oft-forgotten fourth category: I despise—and purposefully forget about—both. But for the sake of this review, I pretended I belonged firmly in the third category.

The Hyperboot next to a regular pair of running shoes. © Raymond Wong / Gizmodo

During my two-week stint wearing the Hyperboot before and after every single run—I promise!—which ranged from easy three-to-five-mile runs, a couple faster interval workouts, and an 8-mile longer run on the weekend, I found myself looking forward to my workouts solely because that meant I got to spend some time in the boots. Having spent a decent amount of my free time in Normatec Legs during numerous marathon builds circa 2018 through 2022, I know the “fresh legs” feeling these devices can create. It’s an undeniably gloriously light, airy experience. The new Hyperboots did not disappoint on this front. And the addition of heat created this feeling of stepping into one of those foot baths with a massager, but without the added messy water setup and cleanup.

The setup of the boots themselves was straightforward. The boots are charged via two USB-C cords that are plugged into a wall charger. The charge will last for about 1.5 hours (that is plenty of time in the boots; see below.) There are four buttons: an on/off button, a compression button, a heat button, and a start/stop button. Both the compression and heat buttons have three ranges of intensity.

© Raymond Wong / Gizmodo © Raymond Wong / Gizmodo

Once you’ve strapped in and turned the device on, the Hyperboots will compress to each foot. Pressing the start/stop button will begin the sequential compressions and heat. At first, I turned both settings—compression and heat strength—up to max. While the intense compressions were not bothersome (rather the opposite), the heat quickly became unbearable. The heat ranges in intensity from 111-degree Fahrenheit on the lowest level to 125-degree Fahrenheit on the highest level. Be warned: the highest level was so hot that I had to remove the shoes mid-session (though not so hot that I had to run them under cold water or I got a burn, don’t worry). I’ve since learned that either I’m a wimp when it comes to heat or the boots are simply too hot. Either way, I was only able to tolerate the shoes on the lowest possible heat setting. Even with that setting though, the feeling of a hot water bath comes through just fine.

I was surprised how much the shoes made my feet and ankles feel fresh, relaxed, and equally refreshed to begin a workout, as well as restored if I had just recovered from one. The main concept behind the boots, according to Hyperice and Nike, is that your ankles and feet are important but both forgotten and tricky areas to treat. Technically, the Normatec Legs do cover your feet and ankles, so if you already own a pair of them (and they are the exact same price as the Hyperboot right now), you might be wondering what more the Hyperboot can provide.

© Raymond Wong / Gizmodo

Having tried both, I will say that the Hyperboot provides a more targeted compression of the ankle compared to the Normatec Legs, and once you’ve finished, you can really feel the difference. The Hyperboot made my ankles feel light, airy, and ready for my next workout. Just as significantly, the addition of heat was not insignificant. It made a notable difference—subjectively!—to how I felt after wearing them.

Technically speaking, the shoes are designed so that you can stand, walk, sit, or travel all while getting the compression and heat benefits. On that note, the shoes are TSA-approved for carry-on, according to Hyperice. But also on that note, if I am being blunt, I had a lot of trouble forcing myself to leave my apartment in these shoes. Inside my apartment, I could wear them for hours all while cleaning, cooking, and doing other housework. The midsoles are extremely comfortable and the boots, in general, have a propeller-like feel similar to the feeling of wearing carbon plate racing shoes. However, I did feel like I got the most benefit from them just by sitting down, relaxing, and letting the compression and heat work. And, because I care deeply about my readers, I forced myself to wear them outside twice: once to get coffee and walk around my neighborhood and another time to a grocery store. Many people looked at my feet. Nobody asked questions.

Do They Actually Help You Recover Faster? What Does the Science Say?

© Raymond Wong / Gizmodo

It’s undeniable that these shoes make your feet happy. But how does that translate into true recovery? And what evidence do we have to back that up? That’s where things get trickier.

The compression device technology was originally developed for bed-bound hospitalized patients to prevent blood clots. The periodic compressions mimic what would happen if someone were to, say, walk the length of a hospital wing, which is probably the same distance as one city block or less. Doctors knew that prolonged immobility increased the risk for blood to clot, so by mimicking movement, these boots would reduce the risk of these dangerous clots in a person who couldn’t move. Later on, the founder of Normatec, a doctor named Laura Jacobs, further refined these devices to specifically help people dealing with postoperative lymphedema in breast cancer. Her device was then introduced to the athletic community as the Normatec Legs. If it can help blood flow and lymphatic drainage in immobile, hospitalized people, then it might help athletes, too.

But there’s a catch to this. The difference between an athlete—from elite to amateur—and an immobile patient in the hospital recovering from surgery is that an athlete can walk a city block. And unfortunately, there’s still little evidence to suggest that these compression devices do anything more for recovery than a walk can provide. The Hyperboot is new, so there aren’t independent studies on its effectiveness. However, since the Normatec Legs came out, there have been a number of studies looking into whether these devices help in recovery.

© Raymond Wong / Gizmodo © Raymond Wong / Gizmodo

A 2020 study published in the International Journal of Exercise Science followed 10 distance runners (five female and five male runners) and monitored how they felt after runs that ended in a session with compression boots (Normatec Legs or ones similar) and runs that didn’t include a post-run session. The study concluded that “there appear to be no substantial benefits of IPC in promoting recovery.” A 2024 meta-analysis, which pulls together a bulk of studies all on the same subjects and looks for overall trends, published in the journal Biology of Sport, looked at 17 studies, which included a total of 319 participants, and concluded that the boots provided “a trivial to moderate effect” on pain and muscle soreness markers and “a highly variable effect” on markers that look at muscle damage. The authors found that this technology “might be a method with potential effects for recovery in sports, mainly reducing perceived soreness.”

The problem is that, as Christie Aschwanden, author of Good to Go, about the science of athletic recovery, told Runner’s World, it’s really hard to measure what recovery is or means as “there’s no single physiological measure—not heart rate, body temperature, or hydration status—that will tell you whether or not you’re recovered.” In fact, ‘How do you feel?’ is a common way to monitor recovery.

In that vein, the Hyperboot did make me feel good. I felt better after wearing the boots than I did before putting them on. This was true every time I wore them. And I looked forward to wearing them, so much that they made me look forward to harder workouts that I otherwise was somewhat dreading. However, at $900, if I could get the same benefit that the Hyperboot provides by walking to and from the park where I run instead of starting my run as soon as I leave my apartment, I’d probably opt for that. Though it wouldn’t be as relaxing or fun.



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June 19, 2025 0 comments
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Star Wars Battlefront 2 lives, as a massive community return campaign results in a new Steam player record
Game Reviews

Star Wars Battlefront 2 lives, as a massive community return campaign results in a new Steam player record

by admin May 27, 2025


Star Wars Battlefront II has been granted a new lease of life. With a community-led effort to storm back into a war-torn galaxy, far, far away, players have flocked back to EA’s sci-fi shooter in great numbers, breaking concurrent player records on Steam.

Prior to this event, the game was seeing an average peak player count of around 1,000 users each today according to SteamDB. However, starting May 4 (Star Wars day), this number started to climb drastically. It first hit a peak of 5,583 players, then continued to climb throughout the month, eventually peaking yesterday at 18,635 concurrent Star Wars fans.


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Battlefront II launched back in 2017 to mixed reception, thanks in part to a horrid microtransaction model. However in the years since, the game has shaped up quite nicely! Foregoing the aspects many found distasteful at first, it proved ripe for a rigorous return to a collective of gamers hungry for some widescale PvP action.

All in all, it’s a pretty lovely moment in the history of the series. People are flocking to social media to show off the game in all its wackiness, as well as its capacity to create cinematic moments. Take this post, from user Alej on Twitter, which shows a small snippet of the game in action. Fast-paced gameplay with ships flying all over the gaff, kicking up dust and laying down aerial barrages. It is still a great game, and dare I say, offers a salve to other games out there without the years of content and solid backbone.

Are you playing Battlefront II right now? Let us know below!



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May 27, 2025 0 comments
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Alternate between 14 lives in Level-5's latest open world fantasy RPG, out on PC this week
Game Updates

Alternate between 14 lives in Level-5’s latest open world fantasy RPG, out on PC this week

by admin May 19, 2025


Fantasy Life i: The Girl Who Steals Time is a “Slow Life RPG” in which you live out 14 different lives in… hold on, record scratch and/or Gru’s Plan fourth panel – let me run that premise by myself again. I have to live 14 different lives? How is that “slow”? I have a hard enough time keeping up with one life in the amateurishly designed role-playing game we call reality, with its saddening shortage of rideable dragons.

Ah, but of course developers Level-5 are merely being cute with their framing. By “lives” they really mean classes or character jobs. In this blend of open world boglin basher and island town-builder, you will switch lives like you’re, well, exactly like you’re putting on different coats and hats, going by the trailer. Those 14 lives are split between three self-explanatory categories: under Gathering Lives we find farming and fishing, while Crafting Lives include blacksmithing, alchemy and such, and Combat Lives are all about ending them.

Watch on YouTube

The game launches this week, as detailed on Steam. We haven’t covered it before, and I’m not aware that anybody currently employed at the Treehouse has played the previous instalment on 3DS. I do, however, have many fond memories of Level-5’s older RPGs – Dark Cloud and Chronicle, Ni no Kuni: Wrath Of The White Witch, and let’s not forget Dragon Quest VIII. Still the Dragon Quest to beat, for my onions. Professor Layton? I’m afraid I don’t know him. Did they consult with him on Jeanne D’Arc?

In any case, Fantasy Life i seems as bright and burgeoning and basically happy to exist as any of those games – so chipper and sparkling that I’m willing to forgo murdering the studio leadership for putting that lowercase “i” in the title.

The premise is that you’re part of an archaeological expedition who discover bits of fossilised dragon on an island. In the process, you also find a portal to the distant past that allows you to unravel the mystery of the island’s downfall.

Over the course of the game, you will alternate between roaming the monster-addled continents of yore and terraforming the island in the present, adding houses and decorations and terrain fixtures such as rivers. It’s an Animal Crossing game with its foot stuck in Dragon Quest Heroes. There is talk of saving the world, but it sounds like that comes a very distant second to choosing the wallpaper.

Look out for the game on 21st May. Given the multiple Lives framing, the obvious thing it’s missing is an introspective spiral akin to the tawdry soap opera that is The Alters, in which one man clones himself in order to operate a huge rolling spacebase. If I actually had 14 different lives at my disposal, I guarantee you there would be a pecking order with the Cook at the top of it.



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May 19, 2025 0 comments
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