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I just finished going over a warm up piece from LG PT46 and had a bit of a realization during BR. I commented at the link below and I would absolutely love to know what other 7Sagers think about this added step going onto each LG game.
https://7sage.com/lsat_explanations/lsat-46-section-4-game-2/
It's sorry it's so long. Thank you!!
Comments
Hmm.. this is interesting. And it makes sense. Reading the question stems to see if there are a number of MBT and MBF does seem to indicate some very hard set rules in every scenario the rules could create.... meaning it's not real open ended, and showing that we should only have so many options.
I will be watching this thread for thoughts on this.
I think scanning questions first on LG is a good idea. I believe this is what @"J.Y. Ping" recommends.
This is @TheDeterminedC's post on LSAT 46 - Section 4 - Game 2:
Thanks for the response @akistotle!
Yes! You are totally right about J.Y. advocating for skimming the questions, but on that particular game or any others like it, I think the skimming should be used as an indicator for the "exception" to a commonly held rule. The typical saying that goes around for LG is that if there are more boards then questions, it's not worth the time investment. With a ton of global questions, however, I think "4" of those questions amounts to substantially more game boards then one would think (somewhere around 15 or so). In the video explanation, J.Y. made a really opened-ended game board and hit the questions. For some people that works great for them and if they can do a game like this by doing so, then perfect.
I just looked at the paper after my timed go and holy cow were there game boards in every open space possible. None of the game boards at that point can be utilized very easy at all. I don't know how I went about splitting each one----particularly what rules were forced based off the first placement and what can move ect.
At the start of BR I just laughed at my PT paper where I could have relieved so much stress during that game and the rest of the test had I known how to react when the questions are all global.
By the way, thanks for making the text show in here, I appreciate it.
@AudaciousRed what you said makes total sense. You give a valid point that ACs also carry weight in restriction as well. Some MBT question ACs can be something simple like "C is before day 3," which is not alarming on an average game. So in that sense, maybe skimming ACs will help decipher this dilemma too. I don't even think you would have to read it at all either, it would just be looking for "if" on any global ACs. For instance, the second question in PT46 S4 G2 is a global question, but all 5 of the ACs start off with "if X then Y." Which basically means that each AC will offer new restrictions. So, while the game itself is not super restrictive, the new rules in each AC are specifically calling on one of those game boards out of however many there are. If the correct answer happens to be AC E, then that one question will take several minutes to complete. The next three questions are similar.
Of course, all this would be done after drawing out rules and inferences. And by no means would I do this on every game, but I think one can judge the difficulty of a game when the board is finished... or lack thereof . Ultimately, this is really for an ease of mind process to use on test day I guess. I don't ever want to get hit with a curve ball on test day where 4 minutes into the game I realized I should have split, even though there were a number of boards. I did fine on the section but I'd rather put myself in a better position for a game if I am able to then take longer then necessary and have that become a stressor.