- Fri Nov 23, 2018 7:39 pm
#60760
Hey there gcs4v333, I happen to be one of the biggest template junkies I know, and I too started looking at this game to see if templates were a good idea. I based mine on the OZ block, figuring that placing that would do a lot to force T-V-W into position. I was right about that when that block went either first or last, but the other three were pretty lame, and I abandoned the idea quickly. I think this game is really just one that requires a lot of "brute force", although most of the questions turn out not to be that troubling (the last one being the most time consuming and labor intensive). I would just go into it with the two sequences of J-K-L and T-V-W, the not block for NY, the block for OZ, and the not-law for W at 4, and then off to the races!
If I were to do anything more it would be based around pushing the T-V-W sequence to its extremes, because of the additional restriction on W. If T is 3rd, the latest it could be, then Y and Z must be in the first two spaces, and Y would have to be paired with J (and that looks like the correct answer to #19, as well as eliminating three of the wrong answers to #22 AND three of the wrong answers to #23). If W is 3rd, the earliest it could be, then Y and Z get forced to the last two spaces, and Y must be with L (which didn't appear to help at all with any of the questions).
Sometimes you just have to try a few things out and then get on with it! Again, I don't think templates are the way to go here, and W is only one factor to consider. Those two hypotheticals are all I would do before diving in, especially with only 5 questions to be answered. This is coming from a major template junkie, again, so take that into consideration!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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