opus03 said:
I just finished yesterday as well...and I agree with you, not too many unexpected topics. I unfortunately did have (what seemed like) a lot of biochem questions and some of the most obscure embryo questions anyone could ever come up with!! Oh well, I'm just glad it's over and it was definitely survivable!! I followed a lot of the advice on here and used the same books as everyone else....so thank you to everyone for posting! 👍
Good luck to everyone yet to take it!
Okay, I'll add my voice to the crowd here too...
I just took Step 1 today, and man... The MCAT was long, but I'm exhausted.
All in all, I felt that it was really a fair test. Like others have said, I had a fair share of questions that were one line long and really straight forward. A couple of them were charts that a third grader could read and answer correctly - made me second guess myself a couple of times. Lots of up-and-down-arrow questions, but the topics tested were all common (like, parathyroids destroyed in thyroidectomy, what happens? duh!). Also a few questions with words I had never heard of before. Just guessed and moved on.
The blocks varied in difficulty and content. The first few I had were okay, then they got really easy, then the last one had like ten neuroanatomy questions that I'm sure I got slammed on. So I ended on a down note, but ah well...
Breakdown: lots of behavioral science. Many study design questions, all straight forward. Some odds ratio calculation. Many "what do you say next", most were easy but some... I just narrowed it down to two and guessed. Don't know how you can study for that stuff. Path was all pretty straightforward stuff - a few oddballs, but mostly easy stuff. Almost no embryo (thank god). Fair amount of anatomy, most straight forward, but again some that I had no idea. Lots of immuno, but if you know your cytokines from FA, I felt that was enough. Pharm was also straightforward - common reactions (like drug induced SLE). There were no "which drug from this class?" would you use - if there was a questions about adrenergics, it would be a beta-blocker, an alpha agonist, etc. Biochem - more concept oriented than pathway oriented (like, patient is fasting, what's in his blood?), but I did have a couple of straight pathway questions. Not a single Fabry's Disease or sphingolipidosis which I was ready for, the bastards!

Microbio - again, nothing that wasn't in FA and Ridiculously simple. One virus question about single/double stranded DNA/RNA in some odd virus. No trematodes or loa loa or praziquantel, so don't waste your time memorizing that stuff!
Should I say "straight forward" one more time?
Many questions were long - I highly recommend reading the last line first on the long ones with patient data. You can save a lot of time that way.
As for what I used... Qbank was my main study tool. I did every question in tutor mode and wrote every explanation that I didn't understand into FA (including all the wrong answer choices). The feeling seems to be mixed around here but I definitely felt like the actual test was easier than Qbank. The questions on the actual test just seemed... more concept oriented than detail oriented. Qbank is good as a study tool (like, I picked up that Cri du Chat is a 5p syndrome, and sure enough...!), but I think it would be hard to figure a correlation. Since I used it mainly to as a study tool, I didn't worry too much about my percentage.
Other books: I also used HY Gross, HY Embryo, HY Behavioral, Ridiculously Simple. No BRS Path (heresy around here, I know, but it's overkill in my estimation). Listened to Goljan's audio. Then spent the last week reviewing FA (in excrutiating detail - I mean, I literally opened it and started reading - if I didn't remember some fact, I scribbled it on a piece of paper. I ended up with over a ream of paper with notes when I was done, but [for me] I don't remember something unless I write it down with my own hand) and Goljan's HY 100 pages - which I highly, highly recommend. I had many questions that were right out of it - as in, "earthquake in California...

" Others have said it, and it's true - the man knows his USMLE!
I won't post my scores, because they are essentially useless until I know how I did!
Good luck everyone, it's a long day but it isn't that bad, and it feels so great to be done!
LL