Group Games Questions - - Question 11

If G is the only child in group 1, which one of the following must be true?

bb64 January 14, 2021

The game states that the "canoeists will be divided into three groups," but it never says that there has to be 3 canoeists in each group?

How do you gather that there must be 3 canoeists in each group? The question never states this as a requirement.

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shunhe January 15, 2021

Hi @bb64,

Thanks for the question! The game states that “the canoeists will be divided into three groups . . . of three canoeists each.” It’s right after the part that’s marked off by the em dashes. And you know that they’re unique canoeists because it doesn’t make sense to put one person in two canoes, or the same person twice in one canoe.

Hope this helps! Feel free to ask any other questions that you might have. Hi @bb64,

Thanks for the question! The game states that “the canoeists will be divided into three groups . . . of three canoeists each.” It’s right after the part that’s marked off by the em dashes. And you know that they’re unique canoeists because it doesn’t make sense to put one person in two canoes, or the same person twice in one canoe.

Hope this helps! Feel free to ask any other questions that you might have.

JPB May 30, 2021

One of the more difficult concepts I find with LSAT games is realizing the pieces fall into place much easier than it seems Ex. "G is the only child in group 1" It is so easy to rush over something like this and read it as G =1.....that ONLY is crucial....puts T and H in 3, FJ in 2, and thus K in 3........ALL of which falls into place because of "ONLY CHILD". Fatigue and carelessness is your true foe on the games...not complexity