A Free Internet Tool That Will Supercharge Your Strength Workouts

MuscleWiki is a barebones platform dedicated to making fitness simple

MuscleWiki
Mondadori Portfolio/Archivio Marco Piraccini/Marco Piraccini/Mondadori via Getty

The same summer that I maxed out in the bench press, I was maintaining an Excel “lifting spreadsheet” with a friend of mine from college.

We’d open the file at different times throughout the week and jot down weights, reps and assorted notes on form or feel. Anything we’d noticed during our most recent workouts was fair game. As a result, it was a messy, oversized doc, doomed to never make out of August. Still, while it lasted, I remember marveling how effective a free fitness-tracker could be.

I’ve had personal trainers, I’ve used monthly subscription apps and I’ve dropped notes in a spreadsheet that looks like it’s trying to solve a murder. But you body doesn’t care how Instagram-friendly your fitness routine is. Ultimately, it’s only loyal to consistent effort. Whatever medium you employ to make that happen is entirely your prerogative — and recently, I’ve been all in on an online tool called MuscleWiki.

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What Is MuscleWiki?

Founded by Ryan Watson, a British engineer who works for Brave Software, MuscleWiki is a database dedicated to making fitness simple. It accomplishes that, in part, by presenting as an extremely simple website. The crux of the user experience always comes back to an interactive, musclebound figurine.

After you select a male or female frame, you can scroll around the body, and muscle group lights up red, one by one. Once you’ve found one you’re interested in — say, shoulders — you can choose between Exercises, Stretches, Bodyweight or Kettlebells. Each category has around four or five moves, with corresponding GIFs on endless loops and bullet explainers on how to pull them off without hurting yourself.

The “wiki” suffix used here is actually a slight misnomer: MuscleWiki is not open to edits from the general public. (Although it does keep an email, info@musclewiki.org, so feel free to suggest an addition or deletion, at your own discretion.) The website is run by Watson, an editor, a videographer, a manager and four contributors.

That being said, time spent on MuscleWiki is remarkably reminiscent to clicking through Wikipedia, and that is by design. Each hyperlink leads to an accessible, digestible bit of knowledge. Only, these factoids — and the multimedia that accompanies them — aren’t meant to just enrich the brain. They improve the body, too.

A Sample Shoulder Workout

My latest MuscleWiki workout centered on the shoulders. I generated this circuit from the Exercises page:

  • Seated dumbbell shoulder press
  • Side lateral raises
  • Front raises
  • Bent-over rear delt flyes
  • Bench dips
  • Decline push-ups

The total routine took me just 25 minutes, but that was all I had time for on that particular day. I’d gladly do it again, and I could incorporate more bodyweight moves next time — especially if I find myself somewhere without access to dumbbells — or mix in another muscle group, like the chest, traps or triceps, to extend the total session and expand the upper-body focus.

Why We Love It

Therein lies the beauty of MuscleWiki, god-sent life hack that it is. There are zero limitations or expectations on what you should do, what order you should do it in or how long you should do it.

That’s not to say you can’t mess up — strength training without a personal trainer always leaves lifters open to working too hard, or not hard enough. But it’s absolutely possible to overtrain (or plateau) on a much more complex and expensive app, too.

MuscleWiki obviously didn’t discover or pioneer the wisdom it offers. But it’s done better than most in a crowded, overly flashy industry to make that material simple and accessible, if a bit boring. But boring is sometimes good. The most successful fitness journeys subsist on a dull patriotism to routine.

MuscleWiki doesn’t have to oust whatever app you’re spending cash on, or whatever class you’re hoping to rejoin in the next month or so, but consider it a reliable wellspring of advice and ideas in a fitness future that remains full of question marks. You can turn to it for a full workout or to better understand whatever workout you just completed. Like the more famous Wiki that inspired it, it’ll deliver what you’re looking for quickly and succinctly, and always free of charge.

Meet your guide

Tanner Garrity

Tanner Garrity

Tanner Garrity is a senior editor at InsideHook, where he’s covered wellness, travel, sports and pop culture since 2017. He also authors The Charge, InsideHook’s weekly wellness newsletter. Beyond the newsroom, he can usually be found running, skating, reading, writing fiction or playing tennis. He lives in Brooklyn.
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