Hi kan1dice,
If you don't mind, I'd like to jump in here and add a few thoughts! What I recommend in the LG Bible is to:
- 1. Read through the scenario and rules quickly to get a sense of where the game is going and how you might best attack it. This amounts to a quick scan of the rules, one that allows you to get a sense of how all the pieces fit together.
2. Go back to the scenario (just the opening story; I'm not referring to the rules yet) and read it through more slowly, with an emphasis on prefect comprehension of what is being said (still, you are trying to read fast but not so fast you miss something). As you do so, make a base diagram in way a way that best captures all of the information. Represent the variable sets and places for the variables, any randoms, etc.
3. Read each rule again, and as you do so, diagram each rule in the best manner possible. As you diagram each one, you sort of mentally "check it off" to make sure you understand the meaning of the rule. Are you trying to memorize the rule? No, not really. The idea I talk about is a "flash memorization" of the rule, where you have the gist of it, and if you can retain that basic meaning, then that's excellent, but if not then you have your rule diagram that you can glance at and quickly re-grasp the rule.
The memorization question you ask is a really good one, because it highlights the different ways that students approach games. Some students have excellent memories and can memorize all the rules and move on from there. But the vast majoirty of people do not have memories that good, and it's dangerous to try to memorize the rules because if you do so imperfectly, you can mis-remember a rule and end up missing a ton of questions. So, the the best approach is to usually glance back at your rule diagrams when needed. In this sense, your completed diagram is an embodiment of the saying that "A picture is worth a thousand words." If you represent the rules well enough, it's a much quicker way to "see" the meaning of the rules, and that minimizes the penalty for not memorizing them.
Should you read the rules four times, in the way the website you read advocated? I don't think so. Four times is too many and seems like it would waste a lot of time. If you understand the rule, once you've gotten it and captured its meaning in a diagram, you shouldn't need to read it again. For most students, that would mean reading it two or three times.
If you find yourself repeatedly re-reading a rule or all of the rules, that often is a sign that you didn't quite get the full meaning of the rule(s) when you diagrammed it. That doesn't mean that you need to memorize it, just that if you encounter a rule that doesn't make sense, you have no choice but to stop right there and go through that rule until it is clear to you. I sometimes work with students who struggle when this happens—instead of stopping to really iron out what the rule says, they let time pressure get to them and they move past the rule on the theory that they can come back to it later. While I'm ok with skipping over a rule that doesn't make sense, you can't wait until the questions to go back to it. You
have to go back to it after you've finished digesting all of the other rules and before you start the questions.
Anyway, that addresses a lot of different aspects of your question, so if anything is unclear, please let me know. Thanks!