I've only just discovered the Walk With Frodo app on Garmin's Connect IQ store — and as as a huge LOTR nerd, it's going to make the next 1,800 miles fly by

It turns out one does simply walk into Mordor

by · TechRadar

Features By Matt Evans published 12 April 2026

(Image credit: Future)

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Bilbo Baggins once sang, "the road goes ever on and on". But even so, 1,800 miles is a long way to walk. Fortunately, this little Lord Of The Rings-themed app from the Garmin Connect IQ store — available on all the best Garmin watches on our list — is going to make it fun.

The Walk With Frodo app is available to download for free (you can also donate to the creator via the PayPal link in the app's description) and has been downloaded more than 50,000 times in the past five years. It's compatible with pretty much all modern Garmin watches, and works by reading your background activity step count, rather than your recorded exercise sessions.

(Image credit: Future)

Walk With Frodo matches your step count to the journey Frodo and Sam undertake in the Lord Of The Rings, from the peaceful land of The Shire to the fiery chasm of Mount Doom. It's a journey estimated by the app to be around 1,800 miles, or 2,897km, which is a long old journey for little legs. However, Frodo and Sam manage it in 185 days, according to the LOTR Project and The Atlas of Middle-Earth — can you do better?

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Periodically, Walk With Frodo will send you updates when you reach various milestones along the journey, such as Tom Bombadil's house, The Prancing Pony inn, or the mines of Moria. Pressing your Garmin's "start" button will reveal more information about a particular milestone.

How fitness gamification works

(Image credit: Warner Bros)

I'm a die-hard Lord Of The Rings nerd — I re-read the books every couple of years, and the films are my comfort-blanket watch — so this little Garmin app is perfect for me. I can't believe it's been around for five years and I've only just become aware of its existence. I'm super excited at the prospect of completing my long training runs to find I've run to Rivendell, or sprinted through the lair of the giant spider, Shelob — I definitely won't be hanging around in there!

The premise of apps such as this one is nothing new, with gamification strategies having been used for many years now to keep fitness fans glued to smart tech. Apple Watches, Garmin, Samsung, Oura, Whoop... every wearable offers badges, challenges, rewards and other digital "pings" designed to associate activity with increased dopamine. With data comes gamification, tricking yourself into good habits and sharing your achievements with friends.

Occasionally, this can get toxic. Strava, perhaps the most successful proponent of these strategies, uses public leaderboards and segments to keep local athletes competing for titles in a perpetual game of king-of-the-hill. Reports of athletes becoming obsessed with their metrics are almost as disturbing as stories of Strava becoming a national security risk by leaking sensitive military information.

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