4 comments

  • Saturday, Oct 10 2020

    Hello, I had the same issue I recognized some games. However the game types were the ones I have been constantly drilling for over a month. I remembered the set up of the board games more than anything, but I haven't had a problem with doing for the most part, so I don't think it affected me in anyway too greatly, plus I scored within 2 questions that I normally do, so its not like I was getting -6 and then this exam I got a perfect I was always right in the 3-5 wrong on average and this time I went -2. On top of that I also did not complete all the game sunder time some games I went over by a minute or two and others I was under by a minute. I do not remember any specific answer like "ohh this question is D" and only spend 10 seconds on it. Yes there was probably a slight advantage having seen it before mainly that you were more calm and that allowed you to not stress as much, but other than that I think it is safe to count it. And if you want just give yourself that average LG score and apply it to the PT you took to get your 'actual' score. I took the average and seen how it affect my score and then I took what I actually to give myself a range.

    0
  • Saturday, Oct 10 2020

    I agree with what @kkole44474 said. As long as you didn't remember the answer choices, didn't draw inferences off memory but rather by skill, I think you're fine to count it.

    1
  • Saturday, Oct 10 2020

    Count in but understand that it may not be completely representative of your performance on that games section.

    4
  • Saturday, Oct 10 2020

    It counts. I'm sure J.Y remembers some of the games he instructs us on in the LG videos from his early practice. A lot of these high scorers on here have done most of the PTs for practice in the past. Doesn't mean it doesn't count.

    1

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