
The cardio brand behind the AssaultBike and AssaultRunner is elevating old-school grit and discipline, following in the footsteps of CrossFit
The end of summer might have most people mourning the end of lazy days and poolside drinks, but Assault Fitness sees it differently: as a return to pain, discipline and progress and a swipe at what it calls too much of the feel-good wellness narrative.
The “no pain, no gain” cardio equipment brand, known for the AssaultBike, AssaultRunner and AssaultRower, is leaning into its unapologetic ethos with a new campaign titled “My Vacation Is No Vacation,” a message meant for serious athletes who identify with grueling workouts as their real escape.
To kick things off, Assault Fitness is setting up a pop-up at the 2025 Austin Deka Fit and Ultra World Cup on September 5 and 6, where athletes can challenge themselves in an AssaultBike sprint challenge for cash prizes. The campaign will also extend online, with a rollout across social media and select gym partnerships nationwide.
“‘My Vacation Is No Vacation’ reframes the end of summer as a return to form for the fitness-obsessed,” said Sammi Needham, the chief brand officer of Assault Fitness parent FitLab. “While most see vacation as restorative, diehard athletes see it as disruption. It’s a season of inconsistency, missed training and compromised intensity.”

The messaging comes to life through visuals that riff on vacation clichés, like an AssaultRunner ad showing an athlete doubled over with the line, “I like my workouts how I like my piña coladas: so strong I might puke.”
It’s no accident that Assault Fitness is going all in on suffering as progress. The brand’s machines have long found a home in CrossFit boxes, where pain is part of the programming. CrossFit itself is leaning harder into its own hardcore roots with a new and brash “F*ck the Quick Fix” campaign, elevating the message that serious fitness means no shortcuts and zero comfort.
In a recent interview with Athletech News, Jenna Hauca, who became CrossFit’s chief marketing officer last year, noted that the brand was born out of being unapologetically counter-culture.
“At the time, in the early 2000s, everything in health and wellness was quick-fix: how quickly can you get skinny or get six-pack abs?” she said. “CrossFit stepped in and said, ‘We’re something different. We’re going to work really hard, together, and we’re going to be a bit edgy.’ For that reason, it’s become a cult brand.”
Taken altogether, the signals all point to a resurgence in hardcore fitness. Alongside Assault Fitness’ campaign and CrossFit’s return to its gritty origins, race formats like Hyrox are pulling record crowds, while obstacle and endurance events continue to expand worldwide.