Order "Fake" Practice SATs from easy to hard

<p>I was wondering how easy/hard some practice tests are compared to the official tests. I would appreciate it a lot if someone even get them ordered from easiest to hardest.</p>

<p>I'm most interested in these companies:
Kaplan, Princeton Review, Barron's, Barron's 2400, Rocket Review, Gruber's</p>

<p>Thanks!</p>

<p>Barron’s is definitely the hardest. Kaplan is slightly harder than the real thing.</p>

<p>kaplan is UNRELIABLE!
i don’t recommend it</p>

<p>hardest to easiest
barron’s 2400
barrons’s
princeton review
bb</p>

<p>things i don’t know: gruber’s and rr.</p>

<p>unreliable: kaplan!</p>

<p>I feel like if I can ace all of the SAT prep company’s tests, then I’ll be in good shape before I start focusing completely on CB’s tests. Trust me, I have a lot of time.</p>

<p>Any others?</p>

<p>Is anyone familiar with Rocket Review and Gruber’s?</p>

<p>RR helped me a lot with CR and WR, but I think it may slightly easier than the actual thing…</p>

<p>Thanks. How about Gruber’s?</p>

<p>I did the Princeton Reviews first, then the Blue Book, and then Barron’s 2400. After that I bought the 6 practice tests from CB.</p>

<p>I’d say Barron’s is definitely the hardest, Princeton Review is close to the Blue Book tests, and, well, Blue Book and CB tests are the real deal.</p>

<p>@xShadow63</p>

<p>6 practice tests from CB? you mean, CB = collegeboard?</p>

<p>yeah, cb is collegeboard</p>

<p>I think he is talking about their online course</p>

<p>I think it wud be much more helpful if we compared the difficulty of the tests section wise rather than as a whole.</p>

<p>don’t do anything thats not published by ETS. The rest will screw you over.</p>

<p>Are you sure? Especially for the math section, I think doing more is better.</p>

<p>quality > quantity.</p>

<p>actually studying the 8 practice BB tests will guarantee you a 800 in W, given you write a decent essay.</p>

<p>It also guarantees you a deep understanding of the CR passages.</p>

<p>Same goes with math.</p>

<p>Remember that the SAT is a standardized test, meaning they use a template when making questions/answer choices.</p>

<p>after a few tests, you should be able to guess the right answer without even reading the question.</p>