It's easier when you don't forget that the paper is always folded away from you into the page (screen). Then, certain sides (shapes/patterns) cannot appear on the left or right of other sides; an analogy to this is a pair of enantiomers. The trick is to start with one answer choice (why not A?), pick a reference shape (one that's easiest to rotate in your mind if need be) and look for which shapes DO NOT belong to either the right or left side (easier than top/bottom for me). Eliminate answer choices until you arrive at the correct one (hopefully the one you started with to save time).
For symmetrical shapes like dice, you can look for opposite sides and then play the "can't be on the left/ can't be on the right" game.
For others, look for unique shapes of sides that only show up in one or two answer choices; this partially requires the sharp eye needed also in the keyhole section to distinguish slight differences in thickness, angles, ect. I believe this type is by far the easiest.
Kinda random, but at the testing center, can you tough the screen. I like to cover answers when I eliminate them. It also helps with angle ranking. Does anybody know for sure or can put a link to the guideline?
I find it somewhat helpful to make a grid of and then make dots where the paper folded---so I would first see where the holes are and make dots on my grid and then I would unfold and see where additional holes were made and make dots...hope this helps 🙂
I also have this program. Is it me, or are the hole-punching questions on crack-dat-pat insane!!! Sometimes 4-5 holes are punched, and half folds!! Seems harder than anything else I've seen. Is there any correlation to the real test?