- Tue Oct 15, 2019 4:40 pm
#71220
This game is discussed in our Podcast: LSAT Podcast Episode 31: The September 2019 LSAT Logic Games Section
Complete Question Explanation
(The complete setup for this game can be found here: https://forum.powerscore.com/lsat/viewtopic.php?t=31312)
The correct answer choice is (E).
This is an interesting question, and one that at first can appear to be standard Rule Substitution question. But instead, the test makers return to a question type that appeared more frequently in the past, and one that has largely been replaced by Rule Substitution questions in recent years.
First, in standard Rule Substitution questions, the test makers identify a rule and then ask you to find the answer choice that would have the exact same effect as the rule in question. You are effectively asked to find a substitute that has identical results. With that in mind, let's look at this question stem and examine the differences:
Here the test makers tell you that one of the rules (#5) is first suspended and then replaced with an entirely new rule (this time it is similar to #5 but with a key twist). Then, you are asked to find what must be true now that the change has been made. So, instead of finding a new substitute rule, you are given that rule and then have to make a new setup to determine the implications.
Note: This is one of the worst types of questions to encounter because it requires re-assessing your entire setup! You now have to look at everything you did as a result of rule #5 and change it. Typically, it's as if you've got an entirely different game (yes, there is overlap, but some key information has changed so our inferences change; that requires a reboot of a large portion of the work that was done). Because this takes so much time, if you are struggling with time in Logic Games then this is a question type you should skip!
Answer choice (A):
Answer choice (B):
Answer choice (C):
Answer choice (D):
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Someone in addition to Z has to have an HR combo as their two "single" flowers, so let's look at the options to see who that could be.
When you think about it, if we look at this question only in terms of the impact of that last rule, we don't even have to worry about who the other person is that has one H and one R. That's actually a trap to make us waste time! If two people - ANY two people - have one H and one R, then they each have to have either two Gs or two Ls to finish their arrangement. Since only one person can have two Ls, the other has to have two Gs and therefore has no Ls.
This explanation is still in progress. Please post any questions below!
Complete Question Explanation
(The complete setup for this game can be found here: https://forum.powerscore.com/lsat/viewtopic.php?t=31312)
The correct answer choice is (E).
This is an interesting question, and one that at first can appear to be standard Rule Substitution question. But instead, the test makers return to a question type that appeared more frequently in the past, and one that has largely been replaced by Rule Substitution questions in recent years.
First, in standard Rule Substitution questions, the test makers identify a rule and then ask you to find the answer choice that would have the exact same effect as the rule in question. You are effectively asked to find a substitute that has identical results. With that in mind, let's look at this question stem and examine the differences:
Here the test makers tell you that one of the rules (#5) is first suspended and then replaced with an entirely new rule (this time it is similar to #5 but with a key twist). Then, you are asked to find what must be true now that the change has been made. So, instead of finding a new substitute rule, you are given that rule and then have to make a new setup to determine the implications.
Note: This is one of the worst types of questions to encounter because it requires re-assessing your entire setup! You now have to look at everything you did as a result of rule #5 and change it. Typically, it's as if you've got an entirely different game (yes, there is overlap, but some key information has changed so our inferences change; that requires a reboot of a large portion of the work that was done). Because this takes so much time, if you are struggling with time in Logic Games then this is a question type you should skip!
Answer choice (A):
Answer choice (B):
Answer choice (C):
Answer choice (D):
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Someone in addition to Z has to have an HR combo as their two "single" flowers, so let's look at the options to see who that could be.
- It cannot be S, because per the original rules that are still in effect, S has to have TWO Rs.
It could be T! Under the original rules, T has exactly one H and at least one G. We originally inferred that T could not have any Rs, because S is the only one allowed to have two of them and Z was the only one allowed to have just one H and just one R. But now that rule has been replaced, and T could possibly have one H, one R, and two Gs. If that happens, then T has no Ls.
It could also be U! The original rules required U to have an H and an R, and under this new rule U could then have either two Gs or else two Ls. We'll come back to what that means for the rest of the setup in a minute.
It could be W! We originally inferred that W had to have an L with his two Gs, but now W could have an H and an R, and no Ls.
Z remains unchanged in this case, and so has either two Ls or else two Gs.
When you think about it, if we look at this question only in terms of the impact of that last rule, we don't even have to worry about who the other person is that has one H and one R. That's actually a trap to make us waste time! If two people - ANY two people - have one H and one R, then they each have to have either two Gs or two Ls to finish their arrangement. Since only one person can have two Ls, the other has to have two Gs and therefore has no Ls.
This explanation is still in progress. Please post any questions below!