LSAC has officially announced the arrival of what we've known for some time: Logic Games will no longer be a component of the LSAT starting with the August 2024 test. Read on to hear LSAT Demon cofounder and Thinking LSAT cohost Nathan Fox's analysis on what this means for current and future LSAT students.
The purpose of this lesson is to give you permission to ignore the whole “Games Types” chapter of the traditional LSAT-prep catechism. Stop worrying about the semantics, free up a bit of your brain’s processing power, and use that power to actually solve each game.
Sometimes students struggle for weeks or months before things finally click for them on LSAT logic games. Keep grinding! Students frequently improve from the low single digits on a section of logic games all the way up to perfection—a reliable 23-for-23 every time.
If you’re struggling on Logic Games, there’s a very good chance that you’re just not reading carefully enough.
No matter who says otherwise, remember: no one starts at perfect on the LSAT (and especially not at logic games).