Shortcut Techniques

Races and Games

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Races and Games

⚡ Unlock time-saving calculation tricks and mental math techniques. Solve complex problems in seconds with proven shortcut methods used by top performers.

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Shortcut Techniques

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Shortcut Techniques – Races and Games

Shortcut techniques in Races and Games help candidates solve speed-based and scoring-based aptitude questions quickly and accurately in SSC, Banking, Railway, Insurance, Defence, CAT, CDS, NDA, and various competitive examinations.

Most questions from this chapter are based on:

  • Race Speed Ratios
  • Lead and Lag Concepts
  • Start or Handicap Problems
  • Dead Heat Race
  • Scoring Rate in Games
  • Relative Speed
  • Time Difference Problems

Learning shortcut methods reduces lengthy calculations and improves solving speed significantly.

Golden Formula of Races

Speed = Distance / Time


Shortcut #1: Race Ratio Formula

If A beats B by x metres in a race of y metres:

Speed Ratio = y : (y − x)

Example:

In a 100 m race, A beats B by 20 m.

Speed ratio:

100 : 80 = 5 : 4

✔ This is the most important shortcut in race problems.


Shortcut #2: Time Difference Shortcut

If A beats B by t seconds:

B’s Time = A’s Time + t

Useful for quickly finding race timings.


Shortcut #3: Same Distance Rule

When two persons cover the same distance:

Speed Ratio = Inverse Time Ratio

Example:

If speed ratio = 2 : 3

Then time ratio = 3 : 2


Shortcut #4: Start or Handicap Shortcut

If A gives B a start of x metres in a y metre race:

  • A runs y metres.
  • B runs (y − x) metres.

This concept is heavily used in aptitude exams.


Shortcut #5: Dead Heat Shortcut

In a dead heat race:

Time Taken by Both Players is Equal


Shortcut #6: Relative Speed Shortcut

When two runners move:

Situation Relative Speed
Same Direction Difference of Speeds
Opposite Direction Sum of Speeds

Shortcut #7: Faster Runner Concept

The faster runner:

  • Covers more distance in the same time.
  • Takes less time for the same distance.

Shortcut #8: Speed Ratio from Remaining Distance

If A finishes a race and B is x metres behind in a race of y metres:

Speed Ratio = y : (y − x)

Very useful for direct MCQ solving.


Shortcut #9: Games Scoring Shortcut

In games:

Scoring Rate Ratio = Score Ratio

Example:

If A scores 100 while B scores 80:

Scoring ratio:

100 : 80 = 5 : 4


Shortcut #10: Point Handicap Shortcut

If A gives B x points in a game of y points:

  • A scores y points.
  • B scores (y − x) points.

Shortcut #11: Speed-Time Shortcut

When distance remains constant:

Speed ∝ 1 / Time

If speed doubles, time becomes half.


Shortcut #12: “x Times Faster” Concept

If A is x times faster than B:

A’s Speed = (1 + x) × B’s Speed

Example:

If A is 1/2 times faster than B:

A’s speed = 3/2 × B’s speed


Shortcut #13: Quick Distance Formula

Distance covered:

Distance = Speed × Time


Shortcut #14: Quick Time Formula

Time taken:

Time = Distance / Speed


Shortcut #15: Ratio Conversion Shortcut

If:

A : B = 5 : 4

Then:

  • A covers 5 units when B covers 4 units.
  • B lags by 1 unit.

Shortcut #16: Solving Race Questions Without Formula

Many MCQs can be solved using:

  • Direct ratio observation
  • Cross multiplication
  • Proportional reasoning

Shortcut #17: Common Race Interpretation

In a 100 m race:

“A beats B by 20 m” means:

  • A runs 100 m
  • B runs only 80 m

Shortcut #18: Relative Performance Shortcut

In games:

  • Points replace distance.
  • Scoring rate replaces speed.
  • Winning score replaces finishing point.

Shortcut #19: Quick Revision Formula Table

Concept Shortcut Formula
Speed Distance / Time
Distance Speed × Time
Time Distance / Speed
Race Ratio Total Distance : Remaining Distance
Relative Speed Sum/Difference of Speeds
Scoring Ratio Score Ratio
Dead Heat Equal Time

Shortcut #20: Most Important Exam Tricks

  • Convert race problems into ratio problems.
  • Use remaining-distance method directly.
  • Memorize all basic formulas.
  • Practice start and dead-heat questions regularly.
  • Use scoring-rate concepts in game problems.
  • Avoid lengthy calculations.
  • Practice previous year aptitude questions.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Confusing speed ratio with time ratio.
  • Ignoring remaining distance.
  • Using incorrect race interpretation.
  • Ignoring handicap/start conditions.
  • Using wrong scoring ratios.

Important Exam Tips

  • Memorize all race formulas thoroughly.
  • Practice ratio-based questions daily.
  • Improve calculation speed.
  • Focus on logical interpretation.
  • Use direct proportion methods.
  • Practice game scoring problems regularly.
  • Practice previous year aptitude questions.

Shortcut techniques in Races and Games help candidates improve calculation speed, logical analysis, and accuracy in solving competitive examination aptitude questions efficiently.

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