1. A basic rundown of some of the pitfalls you went through studying for the LSAT;
Biggest pitfalls have been emotional. High achievers often seek validation through performance. We work very hard because we want very good results to prove ...
Hey @harrismegan Mike Kim and JY have come up with a list of the hardest logic games... you could look that up for reference... also, PT36 and 38 contain two of the toughest games that I'e seen... and then there is the infamous dinosaur game from PT 57.
... and care and subtlety that Mike puts into his craft. Mike is the real deal. (It ... looking at the LSAT from Mike's unique perspective. There's ... , The Trainer is better because Mike wrote the Manhattan books and ...
@"GSU Hopeful" Word—Not a problem at all. Just drill from the 29–35 range (per Mike's schedules) and/or 7sage drill sets. He's just selecting them by question type.
Why not give us a few examples—sometimes "Misc" questions are categorized differently by different people (for instance, I recently came across a Q that was Misc on 7sage and ID the Role according to Mike Kim [aka Argument Part]).
Thank you for the last bit of info, Mike! I recently purchased your book, and it's helped me immensely with RC and LR. Thank you for taking the time to give us last minute reminders! :)
@Mike Hahahahaha that riddle is infuriating, in the way things one can't easily intuit usually are... break our brains right before the LSAT, Mike, why don't you. :-P