1) Yeah we are systems based, which is nice, as everything you are learning, the cell biology, histology, pathology, and physiology all ties together in each block. OSU is unique in that even the anatomy is systems based. Most schools I've seen have you take anatomy the first few months and then you have to recall it later to apply it to physiology of each organ system. At OSU, you learn anatomy over 2 years, and you learn each system's anatomy while you are learning its cell biology, histology, etc, which is awesome.
2) So it's typically above 70% is pass, and yeah there is an internal ranking that can give you merit-based scholarships depending which percentile for the class you are in. If I remember right top 25% and up gets scholarships, and the higher your rank, the more you get. Also, if you are top 25% you have "honors" which shows up on your transcript and top 10% is "high honors." Most pass fail places I interviewed at had this internal ranking still.
3) Exams are taken on your tablet.
4) There's a lot to like here, as you will see when you interview. There were a lot of research opportunities here, which was important to me. They just opened an awesome new cancer hospital (The James), which I liked as I am thinking about oncology. The med campus is large and has a lot going on. It has tons of specialty hospitals, the med school, the optometry school, and the dental school. You can rotate and do research in every field. The undergrad campus we are attached to is cool too. I believe it is the largest in the country. The campus has four different gyms you can go to, a climbing center, and restaurants and stuff.
I also really liked the course setup. We have lecture in the morning, then online lectures/modules, anatomy labs, and other group activities in the afternoons sometimes. All lectures except the patient panels are recorded, and lecture attendance is usually optional, which gives you a lot of flexibility. Material has been presented in a very sensible way, as all the lectures and concepts tie together, and really focus on the clinical manifestation of the basic science you learn. More than anything though, I liked the people here. Your class is big, ~200 students, so you are always meeting new people. OSU seems to really attract a certain kind of student that is serious about their studying, but also likes to have fun. A lot of us have gone out most weekends to get a break, and even sometimes during the week if we get enough done during the day. Also a huge group of us got season tickets together for the football games, so that will be a ton of fun. There's nothing in the world like OSU football. Finally, it was extremely affordable for me. You can get in state tuition after a year here, which a lot of places don't let you do, and even the out of state was reasonable. Cost of living isn't too bad, you can live very close to campus pretty cheap if you don't mind having room mates.
Hope this was helpful! I have honestly loved school here so far.