- Thu Jan 12, 2023 5:28 pm
#98854
I'll second Paul's view on this frustrating question, but I'll add that you could also use the work you've done in the original diagram to help narrow things down, IF you did a little more work. For example, when I attacked the setup to this game, I tried a few hypotheticals. I based three of those templates off of the combination of the first rule and the last rule:
1. What if I have G, F, and S? V and I must be out. That leaves H, Q, and R, but I cannot include both H and Q, so R is in. I therefore get GFSR and H/Q.
2. What if I have G, F, and V? Then Q and R must be in, with H, I, and S out. GFVQR is the solution.
3. What if I have H and F? Q, V, and I are out, so everyone else must be in. HFSGR is allowed.
In all of these cases, I is out, which is interesting. Makes me think about what would happen if I was in, and that got me the same scenarios that you may have seen in our setup explanation for this game.
How do I use this to attack this question? I use those three diagrams to eliminate answer choices.
A: Looks like this could happen in either scenario that started with G, so this is out.
B: This happens in one of my G situations, so also out.
C: This also happens in one of my G diagrams, so it's a loser.
D: I haven't seen a situation where this happens yet, so I will keep it as a contender.
E: All three of my scenarios allowed this to happen, so it's out, and D is, by process of elimination, the correct answer, with no need to do any testing at all! The work at the beginning paves the way for fast, easy answer selection later in the game.
This is my general philosophy in Logic Games: more work at the beginning means less work later on.
Oh, and those three templates led me to do one more. Since I already tried every possible scenario that involved H or G, what if they were both out? That means I would be left to choose from these 6 variables:
FIQRSV
But the last rule makes it so that I can never have all three of F, S, and V, so one of those has to be out, and the other three must be in! That would look like this:
IQR (F,S,V)
Four templates, no fuss!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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https://twitter.com/LSATadam