<p>I remember there was a website that charged $100 for a review, and it was started by someone at CC. Would anyone remember what it's called or maybe other sites that charge for review?</p>
<p>That’s a waste of money. Is it worth $100 if they are dead wrong? Use Cappex, colleges.niche.com, and parchment.</p>
<p>Unless you want to throw your money out of the window, I suggest that you should forget about paying money for those chancing sites. If you really want to throw your money, which I believe you dont, then why dont you consider essay-edge to fix your essay?</p>
<p>Or you may even use CC for free…</p>
<p>I thought it might be better since the reviewer is a college counselor</p>
<p>College counselors aren’t always right, they just want your money </p>
<p>This is a lot less informative than CC, and there are some ■■■■■■, but if you sign up for College Prowler, you can use this site: <a href=“http://colleges.niche.com/chanceme/[/url]”>http://colleges.niche.com/chanceme/</a> Totally free, not spammy.</p>
<p>collegechancer.com obviusly not perfect but it’s okay</p>
<p>I used Cappex, which stressed me out a ton and, looking back, wasn’t even that accurate. Chancing really isn’t worth it.</p>
<p>Thanks for the responses, but I would rather use CC than a robotic chancer. I was just wondering for any inside perspective which is why I was asking about the ones that cost money</p>
<p>Honestly, don’t worry about chancing that much. They can’t tell you what the admissions counselors are going to say, and even if they could, so what? Focus on strengthening your application and whatever else you can do applying to colleges. If you are worried that you don’t have a good range of schools or need some help or suggestions, people on CC can do that. But I wouldn’t hire a college counselor, because some of the advice you receive on CC from longtime users are top-notch.</p>