EarlCat, What are your thought on LSAT Workout by Princeton Review. I know you mentioned it is a good choice for 165+ scorers looking to improve (situation I am currently in). However, do you think the logical reasoning drills they offer are worthwile?? After doing some of them they seem fairly different from the actual LSAT.
Some of the args are good, but others left me scratching my head. The book uses no real LSAT questions, which always involves the danger of deviating from what LSAC would do. In this case, he intentionally deviated in order try and make the content more challenging than the actual test (and thus, a workout). Mission accomplished. Unfortunately, on some of the args I think he missed the mark by too much, and I have to call BS on some of the explanations.

I'm still a big fan of the book for Games and RC. It's worth the cover price alone just for the games IMHO and if you're breaking 165, you should get this book.
Other than than the args, my only other complaints are: 1) There is very little white space--some games have extra content at the top of the page leaving no room for diagramming and sometimes even requiring you to turn the page for additional questions. 2) The answer explanations are often hard to find and once you find them, the questions are in the order you should have attacked them on the test rather than in numerical order. This makes it harder if you only want to find the explanation for just one or two questions.