This won't affect Adidas' partnership with Fitbit to release an athlete-focused version of the Ionic smartwatch in 2018. The two are "moving forward as planned," a spokesperson tells Engadget.

Thankfully, the closure won't necessarily carry a steep human cost when Adidas is looking at new positions for the 74 affected workers. The main concern is whether this hurts or hinders Adidas' digital fitness efforts. It's part of a broader effort to make Adidas a more responsive company, and folding the digital team into other areas may help if it speeds up decision making and makes technology a mainstay of the company's products. At the same time, it's hard not to see this as a loss in some form. Adidas no longer has a central team that can unite all its digital efforts, and there's only so much Runtastic can do to fill in any gaps.