TY - JOUR AU - Herren, Silvia AU - Seebacher, Barbara AU - Mildner, Sarah AU - Riederer, Yanick AU - Pachmann, Ulrike AU - Böckler, Nija Sonja AU - Niedecken, Stephan AU - Sgandurra, Sabrina Alicia AU - Bonati, Leo AU - Hotz, Isabella AU - Schättin, Alexandra AU - Jurt, Roman AU - Brenneis, Christian AU - Lenfert, Katharina AU - Behrendt, Frank AU - Schmidlin, Stefan AU - Nacke, Lennart AU - Schuster-Amft, Corina AU - Martin-Niedecken, Anna Lisa PY - 2025 DA - 2025/2/14 TI - Exergame (ExerG)-Based Physical-Cognitive Training for Rehabilitation in Adults With Motor and Balance Impairments: Usability Study JO - JMIR Serious Games SP - e66515 VL - 13 KW - exergame KW - rehabilitation KW - user-centered design KW - usability testing KW - mixed-methods KW - interdisciplinary research KW - concept functional model proofs KW - exercise KW - cognitive training KW - technology acceptance KW - motor KW - cognitive impairment KW - safety KW - user experience KW - balance impairments KW - balance AB - Background: Exergames are increasingly used in rehabilitation, yet their usability and user experience for patients and therapists, particularly for functional model systems, are underresearched. The diverse needs and preferences of users make conducting usability studies challenging, emphasizing the need for further investigation in real-world settings. Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the usability, safety, and user experience of a novel exergame functional model, the ExerG, from the perspectives of patients and therapists in a rehabilitation setting. Methods: In this mixed methods study, 15 patients undergoing rehabilitation (primary end users [PEUs]) and 20 therapists (secondary end users [SEUs]) from 2 rehabilitation centers in Switzerland and Austria participated in exercising and observation sessions with the ExerG. SEUs received training on system use and technical issue management, enabling them to fulfill their therapist roles while treating patients or mock patients. Rapid Iterative Testing and Evaluation was used and the training software adjusted based on participant feedback. Usability was assessed with questionnaires, semistructured interviews, and through observations during the ExerG testing. System acceptability was evaluated using specific quantitative thresholds based on PEU performance and feedback. An observation protocol tracked SEUs’ correct use, errors, hesitations, task completion time, and needed assistance across scenarios. Results: Patients and therapists reported overall good usability and positive experiences with the exergame. PEUs rated 23/29 (79%) instructions as acceptable, showed good-to-very-good exercise performance in 19/29 (65%) tasks, and completed 28/29 (97%) tasks. Patients reported no adverse events, showing improved performance and enjoyment across ExerG exercising rounds, with 79/90 (88%) expressing positive emotions and reporting median scores of 9 (IQR 7.5‐10) on a 1‐10 user satisfaction scale. Patients were willing to continue using the device if the graphic design was improved (5/15), tracking systems and projector quality were enhanced (each 3/15), instructions clarified (12/15), and the game variety increased (2/15). PEUs felt secure in the safety harness (15/15) but recommended swivel arm movement enhancements (5/15). SEUs effectively executed scenarios, with hesitation and difficulties observed in only 14/41 tasks and 2/41 tasks, across all 20 therapists, accounting for 1.7% and 0.2% of the 820 total task cases, respectively. Therapists’ quantitative usability ratings were high (median System Usability Scale score 82.5, IQR 65‐95). All SEUs expressed their willingness to use the ExerG (20/20) and reported being able to operate the system using the user handbook (20/20). They emphasized the motivation-enhancing effect of video-game based training (12/20) and considered the activities supportive for physical and cognitive skills (20/20). They suggested incorporating daily living task simulations (13/20), more customizable options (6/20), more targeted motivational feedback (9/20), clearer performance ratings (9/20), and more concise activity instructions (6/20). Conclusions: The interdisciplinary, iterative ExerG development approach shows promise. The findings will inform future optimizations. Future work will assess long-term impact. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05967078; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05967078 and OSF Registries OSFCQ9AT; https://osf.io/cq9at SN - 2291-9279 UR - https://games.jmir.org/2025/1/e66515 UR - https://doi.org/10.2196/66515 DO - 10.2196/66515 ID - info:doi/10.2196/66515 ER -