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Re: Raj played three rounds of a game of chance. In each round [#permalink]
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Bumping for review and further discussion.
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Re: Raj played three rounds of a game of chance. In each round [#permalink]
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Bunuel wrote:
Bumping for review and further discussion.



this will be relatively easy if we chose 4x as the amount he starts with as we know that we want to give the quarter of the amount he won in the first round to his friend.

so
at start he has 4x

we doubled that in first round so now has 8x ( so he won 4x ) and quarter of that is x , this x is waht he gives to his friend ...so he is left with ( 4x + 4x -x) = 7x

after second round 14 x after third round 28 x ....and he gives x+x+x = 3x to his frnd so left with 25 x

second case when he gives double of what he won to his frnd

at start 4x

he doubles it to 8x ...so half of what he won he gives to his frnd i.e 2x so end of first round he is left with ........8x - 2x =6x

after second round he doubles to 12 x and then aftewr third 24 x ..but he gives 2x+2x+2x to his frnd so he is left with 24-6 = 18 x


now 25x-18 x = 70

x = 10

so initial amount = 40
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Re: Raj played three rounds of a game of chance. In each round [#permalink]
indeed, the wording is a little bit confusing..started doing with algebra..but then said F.. it, let's try the numbers:
started with 160, did not provide the necessary outcome.

then picked 40
40*2 = 80 after 1st round, he gave 1/4 of 40 or 10, thus, he remained with 70
doubled, now he has 140, 10 gave to his friend, remained with 130
doubled, 260, minus 10, remains with 250

now,
40*2-20 = 60
double - 120 , gave 20, remained 100
double, 200, gave 20, remained 180

if we know for sure that he would have had 70 less RS, then 40 definitely works.
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Re: Raj played three rounds of a game of chance. In each round [#permalink]
OMG, i spend too much time on this question. I did not read the question carefully, the amount given to the friend is not equal 1/4 or 1/2 the gain in the previous round.

It seems there is no other way, but to test each option choice.
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Re: Raj played three rounds of a game of chance. In each round [#permalink]
Hello from the GMAT Club BumpBot!

Thanks to another GMAT Club member, I have just discovered this valuable topic, yet it had no discussion for over a year. I am now bumping it up - doing my job. I think you may find it valuable (esp those replies with Kudos).

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Re: Raj played three rounds of a game of chance. In each round [#permalink]
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