Hi all,
I realized that I tend to solve for all possible "worlds" in my set-up but not proficient enough do it in a timely manner that paralyzes me when it feels like much time has gone by. When I watch JY's explanation I realize I was on the right track and was making all possible worlds but was doubting myself and did not push through with a few more scenarios which would have allowed me to answer all questions quickly afterward. I also realized JY doesn't always solve for all possible worlds (he has a separate video for it underneath)but employs a method that's rule-driven for each question. For me however when I approach a game that has limited solutions but not few (say 10-15 scenarios) I instinctively choose that route but start to doubt myself halfway in. Can anyway help me out with what I can do with the exam only a week away?
Thanks.
Comments
If you're open to a retake or to pushing the test date, however, you will want to practice limiting your game board splitting and playing more of the games in your imagination. Start with games that have "easy"/"obvious" splits and see whether you can get by with just one or two more general game boards, instead of 4 or 6 or 8 scenarios. Get some experience playing into 'empty' game boards and being okay with the uncertainty, even if you feel like it'd be faster for you if you just wrote it all out. If you never practice and never push your boundaries, you'll never develop the skills necessary for you to transition to that higher tier of understanding.
Rule of thumb - you never have to brute force the LSAT like that. There is an elegant solution for everything you encounter; your task is to find it. Get in this mindset and practice hard!