Watching a Kevin LSAT explanation video is sufficient for me to be Lovestruck 😳, hence, if I am not Lovestruck, I did not watch a Kevin LSAT explanation video 💯
I noticed some games have timers and others don't. Is there any theory behind this?
I resist the time challenges but I figure it is a good exercise even if it pushes me outside my comfort zone. Switching over to an untimed game is like going back to an untimed drill after applying a time sensitive rule.
At this point in my development I am trying to answer questions with confidence to avoid the time sink of process of elimination after already committed. A part of that exercise is forcing the brain into to move forward into the next question without the confidence and comfort for more time on challenging questions. When shifting back into an untimed drill I am purposely anticipating with confidence and moving on without PoE, avoiding the training wheels and reassurance pattern.
@NoNamed92 Some games involve a bit more reading; I thought those would benefit from the lack of a timer to encourage careful reading. But if there's not enough pressure here, perhaps we can make every game have options for timing (unlimited, relaxed, standard).
@Kevin_Lin I think it would be helpful to have untimed options! I struggle with negation, but the game has helped a lot. I think it would be helpful to have an untimed version as sometimes the timer causes me to panic even though with enough time I can get it right. I just sometimes need an extra few seconds than the timer allows.
21 comments
Watching a Kevin LSAT explanation video is sufficient for me to be Lovestruck 😳, hence, if I am not Lovestruck, I did not watch a Kevin LSAT explanation video 💯
hahahah so fun
Oh, this is goooooood! I had so much fun going through that.
i'm obsessed with this one! kudos to the team!
conclusion vs premise games pls!
@lexi This is on the way!
@Kevin_Lin Amazing thank you!
Conditional logic games next please !!!!!!
@ellaryals11312 https://7sage.com/games/logic-blitz
and
https://7sage.com/games/logic-links
can help these skills, but more are on the way!
amazing can we get games to help train with conditional logic?
Who thought of this?! I love it
@valpal They for sure need a raise lol
THIS IS SOOOOO GOOD LOL LOVE THIS
A game about whether a keyword is a "suffecient, necessary, if / then" indicator word would be amazing!
what a cute idea! brb swiping on this instead of muzz
Love the games, thanks for all of the work you guys do <3
Who needs dating apps when we have this game to swipe on
@superchillasian real
I noticed some games have timers and others don't. Is there any theory behind this?
I resist the time challenges but I figure it is a good exercise even if it pushes me outside my comfort zone. Switching over to an untimed game is like going back to an untimed drill after applying a time sensitive rule.
At this point in my development I am trying to answer questions with confidence to avoid the time sink of process of elimination after already committed. A part of that exercise is forcing the brain into to move forward into the next question without the confidence and comfort for more time on challenging questions. When shifting back into an untimed drill I am purposely anticipating with confidence and moving on without PoE, avoiding the training wheels and reassurance pattern.
@NoNamed92 Some games involve a bit more reading; I thought those would benefit from the lack of a timer to encourage careful reading. But if there's not enough pressure here, perhaps we can make every game have options for timing (unlimited, relaxed, standard).
@Kevin_Lin I think it would be helpful to have untimed options! I struggle with negation, but the game has helped a lot. I think it would be helpful to have an untimed version as sometimes the timer causes me to panic even though with enough time I can get it right. I just sometimes need an extra few seconds than the timer allows.