Hello internet people,

I just started using 7sage. I am super picky. I did a little research on reddit about what sources are good to use. I tried to read Loophole last night and I just couldn't get into it. Started using 7sage today and I really like it. Again, that is saying something because of how picky and skeptical I am. I liked the explanation of the Spanish question (the first question they give you). I got it wrong but after the explanation I was like, oh, this question isn't even hard now that I know how to think.

So, wanting to throw this out there and see what responses I get. Who is paying for 7sage? Is it worth it? So far I am doing everything for free but I'm going to keep using this and see how it goes for a bit.

2

2 comments

  • Wednesday, Nov 26

    @ChadBerry TLDR: Personally can only sing 7Sage's praises.

    LOVE the analytics, really think they can be usefully applied to tailor and target your focus/studying. LOVE how much data they give (maybe can be too much for some but my counterargument would be just use what you need if it's too much - too much is better than too little). LOVE their classes - have not a single class that wasn't great where I actually learned something (i.e. not just doing questions and learning why the right answer is right and the wrong ones wrong) - and here have to give a shoutout to Henry and Bailey because they are absolute teaching stars - others are outstanding as well, but just to give an example to highlight they really stood out to me thus far. LOVE all the features they have and keep iterating - having been a subscriber since around September I am really impressed with how they take feedback and try to apply it and seemingly role out or adjust features very quickly. LOVE the multiple ways to interact with other LSAT Studiers - i.e. through the discussions features for questions, this of course, and the chat feature - so much to potentially learn from so many. Finally, really LOVE the user interface - fun, intuitive, and motivating.

    I know some (especially competitors) talk down the Blind Review feature, but I think that is an excellent way to review/learn - i.e. it's randomized enough to when it pops up I'm not sure if I actually got it wrong or right and so it's a second chance to tackle the question just without time constraints and maybe realize that what I thought on the first pass was or wasn't true - for me at least it's not like I know for sure what I got wrong or right (sometimes can't even remember for sure) so it's not like I'm just down to a 50/50 on blind review - granted I agree that you shouldn't take your BR "score" as a gauge of how you'd perform under real test conditions, but to me it's still a good metric on whether you really understand the material or not and where you have serious gaps (i.e. couldn't get it the first time OR BR).

    I do wish they had more text explanations (beyond just the video for the question) and I do wish they had a mobile friendly app like LSAT Demon, but all of the other features/highlights I mentioned above IMO blows anything else I've seen/tried out of the water. Like you, I'm checking out Loophole and LSAT Trainer - I think they are good supplements, but not substitutes.

    Hope that helps!

    1
  • Wednesday, Nov 26

    For me it is worth it for the drilling alone, and that doesn't take into account the curriculum. Yes, it is $99 a month, but this whole process is about investment, so why short yourself when making sure you get into your dream school where you will spend +100x that? (Accounting for a year of the monthly subscription.) That's just my opinion. I tried going the free or cost limiting route similar to yourself at first, and I wish I just jumped in after finding something that worked.

    1

Confirm action

Are you sure?