Hi. Missing questions is not great or helpful either way but on the focus test, you’re not penalized the same way as in the classic. It seems like the sequence and the order of mistakes isn’t as critical as it used to be. What matters however is the difficulty of the questions you get wrong so if you got two easy questions wrong then it will be bad regardless of where they were. Similarly, if you got too hard questions wrong, it will be a minor impact regardless of where they were.
I can tell you that I have run gmat prep test simulations missing the first seven questions in a row on GMAT prep and the score was pretty much the same as missing seven questions in the middle or seven questions in the end. Just minor differences in fluctuations, sometimes even giving me a higher score when I missed the first seven.
It’s been a while but I can dig up my spreadsheet and share my findings.
I definitely feel you warm up more before your test basically figure out a way not to shoot your toe with the first few questions by the same time, it’s not like you hit the self-destruct button or anything like that. On GMAT focus, from what I have observed, a mistake is just a mistake.
Bottom line is that happen and I think this might’ve just been that.
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