Here's my take on your report:
For Verbal, you were graded pretty harshly. 2 out of the 4 incorrectly answered questions were very difficult, 1 was difficult, and 1 was easy. Unfortunately, the 1 incorrect answer happened pretty early in the test and weighed down your overall Verbal performance. Sounds like you know what the challenging questions were for you, so you spent proportionately more time on the questions that you ultimately would get wrong. Do you recall any questions that you, while solving them, had a hunch you might get wrong? You were overall very fast in Verbal. Did you have a lot of spare time after you finished? If you did, you may consider slowing down, especially on Reading Comprehension questions, among which you got 2-3 wrong. If you did not have spare time, or actually scrambled for time, you stayed on experimental questions for too long - next time, be prepared to skip a question that you had spent too much time on without getting closer to the answer, so that you'll have more time to spend on other questions to get them right. These are things you have to keep in mind on test day. Preparation wise, there isn't much to do since you seem solid in all 3 areas. Make sure you keep practicing so you don't lose the sharpness. Definitely try to maintain the momentum. If you worry about Reading Comprehension, perhaps emphasize this area a little bit, but not at the expense of the other areas. You definitely want to replicate the perfect Critical Reasoning performance!
For Math, the overarching issue is that you weren't able to solve enough difficult questions correctly. The questions you got wrong were on average more difficult than those you got right, across all quarters. You went through Math questions too fast overall. For example, in the 3rd quarter, spending only about a minute and half on each graded question, you got about half of the questions wrong. Your average time spent on DS questions is very short, but your DS is ranked at a mere 55th percentile. It was not until the 4th section, probably when you realized you had too much time left, that you slowed down and recovered the accuracy. This means you need to slow down a lot and make sure you get each question right, one by one. Experimental problems were not an issue here because you didn't spend very much time on them. For further math practice, I would suggest the
Manhattan GMAT practice problems and tests. If you end up taking their tests, ignore the Verbal portion completely - in fact, only take the Math section.
Did this help?