What counts as spatial reasoning here
In this app, spatial reasoning is not one thing. It includes visualizing orientation changes, preserving branch order, distinguishing true rotations from mirrored impostors, and making those comparisons under a time limit.
A 15-minute practice routine
- Spend 3 minutes in the rotation lab watching one shape complete several loops.
- Run one 10-round exact-match session at a stable difficulty.
- Run one shorter rotation-cue session to force explicit axis predictions.
- Review your saved results and note whether errors came from mirrors, speed, or confusion under denser shapes.
How to progress difficulty without scrambling the signal
- Increase cube count when choices still feel visually clean.
- Increase answer choices when you want denser comparison work.
- Shorten time only after accuracy is stable.
- Switch to rotation-cue mode when you want prediction instead of recognition.
Why saved history matters
Practice only compounds if you can tell whether you are truly improving. Saved sessions let you compare accuracy and decision time across repeated setups, which is far more useful than remembering whether the last run felt good.