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Linear games click in my mind whereas grouping games put me in the middle of no where. I always feel like I finally understand the basics of grouping games after completing the blind review of the drills, but my hopes are destructed when I face another new grouping game. Any tips other than "PRACTICE MORE!"?
Thank you!
Comments
How many grouping games have you done?
@10000019 22! Is it too early to be discouraged...? Or should I be discouraged...? The comments underneath the explanations make me feel like I am not on the right track.
I think it's too early to start looking for extra advice. For that reason, I'll give you the cliche advice of "keep practicing".
Don't be too concerned with the comments. People are getting to the games at different stages of their LSAT journey. Also people have vastly different strengths and weaknesses.
Don't worry about comments under the lessons. People comment things like "Under 5 minutes with 100% accuracy!" just to feel good (I know I did lol).
Whenever I do Grouping Games, I try to make inferences upfront (meaning I split into various possibilities.) I learned over the months that I can solve questions quicker that way without panicking. If you have questions about certain games, ask them on this Forum!
Thank you for your advices
Thank you always @akistotle! When linear games felt difficult, I would just start eliminating answers with rules... and it seemed difficult to do the same in the grouping game. I think it is really difficult to know when to stop doing your inferences. Once I start finding the inference, I tend to make so many possibilities.... lol So yes! Like you said, I should practice with writing inferences. Thank you! Any special advice on splitting your main board? Would you recommend splitting according to blocks first or conditionals first? Thanks again
While it depends on case-by-case judgments, I recommend splitting by blocks first. I think splitting by conditionals first makes you prone to make mistakes.
Thanks a lot!