Under the guise of a government publication on remote viewing, the mentalist can name five different
things--playing card, symbol, time, word, and city--on each of 100 different pages. That's 500
potential revelations! The design of this book test is incredible, but as the ad notes, you're not
going to perform this immediately after reading the instructions. While the formulae for determining
the various items aren't difficult, there is memory work involved, and you will have to practice. (I
with they'd have provided a crib, but it's easy enough to make your own.) But I think that's a small
price to pay for a book test with a genuine looking book and multiple, fooling methodologies. It's
one of the best that I've seen--so much better than the simple "name the first word on the page"
book tests--and I have about 60 different book tests in my collection. This is top-drawer stuff for
pros and ambitious amateurs, at a bargain price. If you put in the effort, this will be your
showstopper.
Without exposing anything, is this book test gimmicked in the same way as the BIP book? Or completely ungimmicked? And if ungimmicked, how much fishing is involved to narrow down the apparent 1 in 100 choices?