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- Tue Dec 20, 2016 12:00 am
#44050
Setup and Rule Diagram Explanation
This is a Grouping: Defined-Moving, Unbalanced: Overloaded game.
This is a fairly standard Grouping game, except for the fact that there is a chairperson, and the chairperson affects the size of each group. Thus, the game actually has two different possible groupings:
The vertical bar has been placed between the tenant and homeowner groups to make the group separation in each scenario more clear.
The last four rules are each conditional, and each is relatively easy to diagram:
The combination of the fifth and sixth rules allows for another inference:
The combination of the information above leads to the final setup for the game:
Rules:
Finally, this game contains eight questions, a unique number in modern LSAT Games history. All other games contain either five, six, or seven questions. The presence of eight questions meant that this game represented one-third of all the questions in this section, and thus a test taker hoping for a reasonable score in the Games section had to do this game.
This is a Grouping: Defined-Moving, Unbalanced: Overloaded game.
This is a fairly standard Grouping game, except for the fact that there is a chairperson, and the chairperson affects the size of each group. Thus, the game actually has two different possible groupings:
The vertical bar has been placed between the tenant and homeowner groups to make the group separation in each scenario more clear.
The last four rules are each conditional, and each is relatively easy to diagram:
- Third rule: F Q
Fourth rule: G K
Fifth rule: J M
Sixth rule: M P
- G J
G M
The combination of the fifth and sixth rules allows for another inference:
- J P
The combination of the information above leads to the final setup for the game:
Rules:
- F Q
G K
J M
M P
- G J
G M
J P
JC
or J, M, Q, R, S
MC
Finally, this game contains eight questions, a unique number in modern LSAT Games history. All other games contain either five, six, or seven questions. The presence of eight questions meant that this game represented one-third of all the questions in this section, and thus a test taker hoping for a reasonable score in the Games section had to do this game.
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Dave Killoran
PowerScore Test Preparation
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PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
PowerScore Podcast: http://www.powerscore.com/lsat/podcast/