- Sun Nov 17, 2019 1:37 pm
#72074
When working the training type games, I saved a lot of by time creating scenarios but on recent exams, I am noticing far more local questions on this section that I always draw out question-level diagrams for. Is it bad practice to make the majority of the inferences (not laws, either/or in a particular space, etc.) upon the main diagram and move directly to the questions? The past work would then provide a guided brute force approach and help eliminate answers. Of course, drawing chains in pure sequencing and so on would be an exception.
It is my experience that recent games are a lot less smooth where making more than surface level inferences just wastes time. Am I missing something? I’ve tried to break down my approach after the September 2019 PT and so far I’ve only come up with this,
BTW, this question was inspired by a friend of mine who recommended making scenarios up front based upon the total number of questions.
It is my experience that recent games are a lot less smooth where making more than surface level inferences just wastes time. Am I missing something? I’ve tried to break down my approach after the September 2019 PT and so far I’ve only come up with this,
BTW, this question was inspired by a friend of mine who recommended making scenarios up front based upon the total number of questions.