Leaderboard

#1
Serkan Simsir
Serkan Simsir8,640 score View Profile
#2
Denis Novik
Denis Novik8,550 score View Profile
#3
Dustin Carver
Dustin Carver8,550 score View Profile
#4
sasha rojkovski
sasha rojkovski8,496 score View Profile
#5
Julia Shturman
Julia Shturman8,421 score View Profile
#6
Daniel Pashkov
Daniel Pashkov8,174 score View Profile
#7
Tomer Weizman
Tomer Weizman7,208 score View Profile
#8
ANAND V R
ANAND V R6,957 score View Profile
#9
Robert A
Robert A5,976 score View Profile
#10
Giancarlo Albarello
Giancarlo Albarello5,926 score View Profile
#11
Jeffrey Highsmith
Jeffrey Highsmith5,707 score View Profile
#12
Sofiia Marysh
Sofiia Marysh4,748 score View Profile
#13
Daniel Carrero
Daniel Carrero4,692 score View Profile
#14
Nick Strachota
Nick Strachota3,625 score View Profile
#15
Leslie Nathaniel
Leslie Nathaniel914 score View Profile
#16
Yannick Louis
Yannick Louis450 score View Profile

Competition Rules

Enjoy the friendly competition with people all around the world. You can invite your friends to compete together, it is more fun. During the competition, you all earn points by filling your Activity rings. You get a point for every percent that you add to your rings each day, and you can earn up to 450 points a day. Don’t forget to use rest bonuses, because recovery after a good workout is important as workout self. Whoever has the most points at the end of the competition wins. When the competition is complete, you earn an award. You can win 640 coins*

About the Competition

Umbagog Lake is a wilderness lake located in Coös County, New Hampshire, and Oxford County, Maine. It is one of the most pristine lakes in the state of New Hampshire. It lies in the towns of Errol, New Hampshire, and Upton, Maine, as well as the townships of Cambridge, New Hampshire, and Magalloway Plantation, Maine. The name Umbagog is properly pronounced with the stress on the second syllable (um-BAY-gog) and is said to come from the Abenaki word for "shallow water". Both "Lake Umbagog" and "Umbagog Lake" are commonly used and accepted when referring to the body of water.