Yergh. . . I was a month off on when I'm taking the GREs and it turns out that they're this Saturday, not at the end of April.
More oil on the fire!
Yeah, someone I know took it a few weeks back. Turns out after a day or two of study he was way overprepared. He sounded disappointed talking about it.
Just go in knowing your stuff well enough, and you'll do fine.
I studied for one, maybe two, evenings for the GRE. I ended up in the upper 90 percentile for the Quantitative part, the mid-to-lower 90 percentile for the Verbal part, and a 5.5 on the Analytical Writing. I think you'll do fine.
^^^^ This. You'll probably feel insulted when you do the Quantitative part, because 9/10ths of it is going to be really basic. Like, "I learned this shit in high school" basic. I was kinda disappointed in it too. Didn't really study, got something like 98th percentile on both. Only a 3.5 (out of 5) on the essay bit, but that was mostly because when presented with a "Here's a statement. Agree/disagree?" type question, I wound up arguing that the framework of the question was stupid.
Specifically, the topic was "It is said that a picture is worth a thousand words. Agree/disagree, and support your argument."
My beef with that kind of essay on a timed exam like this is that it doesn't test your ability to write coherently, it tests your ability to come up with good-sounding rhetorical bullshit in a hurry (which I suppose *is* a crucial grad school skill...). My essay ended up arguing that the medium was less important than the shared experience and used Roosevelt's post-Pearl Harbor radio address as an example, and the moon landing broadcast as a counter-example.
So don't make the mistake of trying to argue both sides or argue outside the framework of the question. Other than that, you'll kick that test's ass so hard it will fly into an obstacle and explode into pieces.