Did anyone with just one RC section have passages on Occam’s razor, a town called Brooklyn in Illinois, and one about the shift from marine to land based diet in Neolithic times? Or was this experimental
It has gotten easier. Many of the modern exams have 3 relatively cookie-cutter questions with a fourth question that is miscellaneous but not that difficult.
I second MIT_2017’s advice. Do a few untimed sections, get a sense of the type of questions that are “within your league”. Once your secure these questions, you should be able to get down to
... ; There are also many many cookiecutter responses to flaw types. cookie cutter responses to flaw types. cookie cutter responses to flaw types. cookie cutters?
Never ever heard of that cookiecutter review thing! But you should go with the blind review. The LSAT is also a test assessing how hard you can work, so you shouldn't attempt to cut any corners.
To add to this, I'd maybe read a couple RC sections--or passages from the CC from early PTs and pretend you're just reading articles then compare your work on reading to JY's readings in the videos.