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For Pre-Law Students

Aiming for 170+?
Stop typing flashcards.

You've got PowerScore books, 7Sage videos, and stacks of practice test explanations. But who has time to type them all into Anki? Cruxly takes a photo of your LSAT prep materials and generates practice questions in 60 seconds.

Not affiliated with LSAC, PowerScore, 7Sage, or any test prep company.

Sound familiar?

Real frustrations from pre-law students who switched.

I drill logic games every day but forget the setups by next week. I don't have time to make flashcards for every game type.

Pre-law junior, first LSAT attempt, aiming for 168+

PowerScore Bibles are 1,500+ pages combined. I highlight everything. I review nothing. There has to be a better way.

Career changer, 3-month study plan

I blind review every PT and write detailed explanations. Then they sit in a folder and I never look at them again.

Retaker, went from 164 to 172 on second attempt

Everyone on Reddit says 'make flashcards for LR question types.' Cool. That's another 20 hours I don't have.

Working professional, studying nights and weekends

The math that matters

Average time to create study materials from LSAT prep books. We timed real students.

MaterialManual EntryWith CruxlyTime Saved
LR question types (PowerScore)2+ hours5 min115 min
Logic Games setups (40 games)3+ hours10 min170 min
RC passage structures90 min3 min87 min
PT blind review notes (1 test)45 min2 min43 min
7Sage video explanations (10 videos)60 min3 min57 min
Full LSAT prep flashcard set15+ hours~45 min14+ hours

That's 14+ hours you could spend on actual practice tests—the #1 predictor of LSAT score improvement.

Cover all LSAT sections

From logic games to reading comp, we've got you covered.

Logical Reasoning

  • Flaw questions
  • Assumption questions
  • Strengthen/Weaken
  • Must Be True/False
  • Parallel reasoning
  • Method of reasoning

Logic Games

  • Sequencing games
  • Grouping games
  • Hybrid games
  • In-Out games
  • Mapping games
  • Rare game types

Reading Comprehension

  • Main point questions
  • Inference questions
  • Author's attitude
  • Analogous reasoning
  • Passage structure
  • Comparative passages

Plus: LSAT Writing prep, question stem recognition, timing strategies, and more.

Cruxly vs. making your own flashcards

We'll be honest about what we do and don't replace.

TaskDIY FlashcardsPre-made DecksCruxly
Create cards from YOUR prep materials15+ hours typingGeneric content~45 min (photo & edit)
Match your weak areasIf you have timeOne-size-fits-allPhoto what you struggle with
Cover your specific PT mistakesIf you have timeDifferent testsPhoto your blind reviews
LG setup memorizationYou draw themSometimes includedPhoto game boards
Anki exportN/AUsually availableOne-click export
CostFree (but time = money)$0-50Free tier / $6.99/mo

Our Honest Take:

Pre-made LSAT Anki decks exist, and some are solid. But they're generic—they don't know you missed 5 parallel reasoning questions on PT 88, or that you always mess up grouping games with numerical distributions.

Cruxly doesn't replace your LSAT course. It doesn't replace drilling PTs. It doesn't replace blind review. What it replaces: the hours you'd spend typing flashcards from PowerScore, 7Sage, or your own notes. Photo your weak spots. Quiz yourself. Move on with your life.

What you can photo

If it's LSAT prep, we can turn it into questions.

PowerScore Bibles

Photo pages from the LR, LG, or RC Bibles. Turn dense explanations into active recall questions.

Works with: PowerScore, LSAT Trainer, Manhattan Prep, Kaplan, Princeton Review

7Sage Explanations

Screenshot 7Sage video explanations or their written question breakdowns. Quiz yourself on the reasoning.

Pro tip: Photo the explanation of questions you got wrong—that's where the learning is.

Practice Test Blind Reviews

You know those detailed blind review notes you write? Photo them. Generate questions. Actually review them later.

Logic Game Setups

Photo your game board setups, inference chains, and deductions. Memorize the patterns that repeat across games.

Question Type Cheat Sheets

Those LR question type summaries you made? Turn them into active recall instead of passive re-reading.

Handwritten Notes

Your notebook full of insights, patterns, and 'aha moments' deserves better than gathering dust. Photo, Quiz, Remember.

Questions from pre-law students

Does this replace my LSAT prep course?

Absolutely not. 7Sage, PowerScore, Blueprint, LSAT Demon—these teach you strategy and methodology. You need that foundation. Cruxly replaces one specific thing: the hours you'd spend typing notes into flashcards. Think of it this way: Prep course = Learn the strategies. Practice tests = Apply the strategies. Blind review = Understand your mistakes. Cruxly = Memorize patterns and concepts faster.

Can it help me memorize logic game setups?

Yes—this is actually one of our most popular LSAT use cases. Photo your game board after you've made all deductions. The goal isn't to memorize specific games (they won't repeat). It's to memorize patterns and deduction chains that DO repeat.

What about logical reasoning question types?

Perfect for this. Photo the PowerScore chapter on Flaw questions. Generate 30 questions on flaw types in 2 minutes. Many students create cards for question stem recognition, common flaw patterns, argument structure patterns, and conditional logic chains.

How does it compare to pre-made LSAT Anki decks?

Pre-made decks are solid for general concepts. But they don't know which question types YOU struggle with, which games YOU found hardest, or what YOUR blind review notes say. Cruxly makes cards from YOUR materials, YOUR mistakes, YOUR insights. Many students use both: pre-made decks for broad coverage, Cruxly for drilling specific weak areas.

I'm 3 months out from my test. Worth it?

Three months is plenty of time. Most LSAT improvement comes from drilling practice tests, thorough blind review, and targeted study of weak areas. Cruxly accelerates that last point. Instead of spending Sunday afternoon typing flashcards, spend it taking another PT.

Can I export to Anki?

Yes. One-click export to Anki-compatible format. Many LSAT studiers prefer Anki's interface for spaced repetition. Use Cruxly to generate the cards (the tedious part), then export to Anki for the daily review (the familiar part).

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  • Export to Anki
  • PDF export
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