- Fri Aug 13, 2021 11:42 am
#89640
Responding because I got 100% on this game and I really was not sure how/why as I went through it.
1 key deduction I got partway through the game is that N must be the leader of Z: since we have 5 variables to fill 3 slots, but J and K are clearly excluded from Z, so we need all 3 remaining variables to fill Z. If N, M, and H must all feature, N must be the leader since N cannot be placed elsewhere in Z and leaving it out would not fill the committee. This leaves us with H/M as our only options for S-Z and T-Z
(becoming apparent as I'm typing) Now given that we know M must be included in Z, we can exclude M from all other groups, since it can only appear once (rule 2). This leaves us with 3 variables left to fill X, since J can only appear in Y. We know that H,K, and N, must populate X, leaving us with N as the Leader once again.
L N H,N/K N
S H/K J H/M
T H/K K/H H/M
X Y Z
My setup was decidedly not this developed as I proceeded but if I had taken more time with the distributions, I probably could have gotten to this and almost immediately had the correct answer (E) as it is the only choice with N as the Leader in Z
Other answers can still be dispatched quickly based only on rules (how I actually solved it):
(A) places J in Z, violates rule 4 explicitly
(B) places J in Z
(C) K included in Z, violates rule 3 explicitly
(D) Correct variables but N is in S, not L, direct violation of rule 1
Leaving us with (E)!