New in 2026 · McKinsey Solve

The Sustainable Futures Lab Simulator

McKinsey’s newest assessment module is live — and most candidates don’t know it’s coming. Practise with the most faithful simulation available.

13Q
Sequential decisions per simulation
20m
Time limit — same as the real test
5
Behavioral dimensions scored
3+
Unique ecological scenarios
What is it

McKinsey’s newest — and least understood — assessment module

The Sustainable Futures Lab (SFL) is a brand-new behavioral module added to McKinsey Solve in March 2026. It is the third game in the 85-minute version of Solve, sitting after Red Rock Study and Sea Wolf — and it is unlike either of them.

Red Rock and Sea Wolf test analytical reasoning, optimisation, and data interpretation. The SFL does something fundamentally different. It places you inside an environmental research team and asks you to make a series of connected decisions as a project unfolds in real time. There is no spreadsheet to optimise. No ecosystem to model. Just judgment, under pressure, with imperfect information.

McKinsey has described this shift as bringing a personal fit dimension into the digital assessment for the first time — evaluating how you would actually operate alongside other consultants on a project, not just whether you can solve structured problems in isolation.

“Sustainable Future Lab shifts McKinsey Solve from purely analytical evaluation to include behavioral judgment for the first time in the digital assessment… This reflects skills McKinsey has traditionally assessed through the Personal Experience Interview, now embedded in the digital assessment.”

— Candidate reports, April 2026
Rollout timeline
1
Pre-2026
Solve: two-game format
The 65-minute Solve contains Red Rock Study and Sea Wolf only. This remains the format for 65-minute invitations.
2
March 2026
Sustainable Futures Lab introduced
McKinsey adds the SFL as a third module on 85-minute Solve invitations. First reports emerge from candidates in Germany and the Middle East.
3
April 2026
Rollout expands
Confirmed reports from Southeast Asia, the US, and Canada. The 85-minute format: Red Rock (35 min) → Sea Wolf (30 min) → SFL (20 min).
4
Ongoing
Global rollout continuing
No confirmed global date from McKinsey. The rule: if your invitation says 85 minutes, you will face the SFL. If it says 65 minutes, you will not.
What McKinsey scores

Five behavioral dimensions. No right or wrong answers.

McKinsey does not score individual answers as correct or incorrect. It evaluates the pattern of your decisions across all 13 questions — looking for consistency, intellectual discipline, and sound judgment throughout the full sequence.

🎯
Prioritisation

Can you identify what matters most and sequence your work accordingly? Strong candidates establish direction early and concentrate effort on the highest-impact factors — not everything at once.

Decision-making under uncertainty

Can you commit to a direction when the evidence is incomplete? McKinsey looks for a bias to action — making a reasoned call, documenting assumptions, and staying open to revision.

🔬
Interpreting messy information

Can you distinguish signal from noise in complex, conflicting data? Strong candidates know when to investigate further and when to draw a directional conclusion and move on.

⚖️
Balancing trade-offs

Can you hold multiple competing constraints simultaneously and find creative paths through them? The best responses avoid false binaries — neither optimising for one side nor deferring entirely to others.

🤝
Team & stakeholder effectiveness

Can you create psychological safety, surface dissent, and manage resistant stakeholders? McKinsey evaluates whether you operate effectively through people — not just on problems in isolation.

The simulator

Built to mirror the real assessment

Every simulation follows the exact 13-question format, includes a drag-and-drop priority ranking question, and scores you across all five dimensions at the end — with personalised written feedback for each dimension based on how you performed.

Screenshot
SFL simulator question screen
Demo
SFL simulator walkthrough
Test format

What the real SFL looks like

The SFL sits at the end of the 85-minute Solve assessment. You receive a mission briefing — a written scenario placing your team inside an environmental project — followed by 13 connected decisions that build on each other sequentially.

The questions are not difficult in isolation. The challenge is time pressure and consistency: less than two minutes per question, with McKinsey evaluating the pattern across your full sequence of responses rather than individual answers.

The assessment is text-heavy and judgment-driven. No calculations. No data charts. Careful reading, structured thinking, and consistent decision-making under time pressure are the only tools required — and the only ones McKinsey is evaluating.

1
Mission briefing

A written scenario places your team in an environmental research context, establishing the situation and your role before the questions begin.

2
Drag-and-drop ranking question

One question asks you to rank four actions in priority order, testing task sequencing and hypothesis-first thinking. This can appear at any point in the sequence.

3
Questions 2–13: single-choice decisions

Each remaining question presents a scenario with typically three options. Scenarios evolve sequentially — earlier decisions shape the context for later ones.

4
Behavioral pattern scoring

McKinsey evaluates your decision pattern across all 13 questions — whether you apply consistent judgment or shift approach unpredictably under pressure.

Why practice

The SFL is unlike anything else in the Solve assessment

Candidates who have spent months preparing for Red Rock and Sea Wolf often find the SFL disorienting — not because it is harder, but because it tests entirely different instincts. Familiarity with the format, decision types, and scoring logic is the most efficient preparation available.

01
The format is unfamiliar by design

Most candidates encounter the SFL cold on the day. Knowing what to expect — briefing structure, question flow, decision types — removes the biggest source of time loss: reading instructions instead of answering questions.

02
Consistency is what gets scored

McKinsey is not looking for the single best answer — it is looking for a coherent pattern across 13 decisions. Practising multiple simulations trains you to apply consistent judgment under time pressure.

03
Your weak dimensions are predictable

Most candidates score well on prioritisation and poorly on team effectiveness — because the strongest responses require suppressing instincts that feel right in isolation. Your scorecard tells you exactly where to focus.

Available simulations

Three ecological scenarios. All five dimensions.

Each simulation is set in a distinct environmental context with an original set of scenarios. The scoring model, question format, and dimension structure are identical across all three.

01
Coastal Habitat Recovery

Lead an emergency restoration initiative for the ‘Blue Corridor’ coastal habitat. Develop a scientifically grounded strategy while navigating high uncertainty, complex trade-offs, and intense stakeholder scrutiny.

20 min
13 questions
02
Highland Rewilding

Oversee a high-stakes wolf reintroduction programme in the Highlands. Navigate conflicting field data, manage resistant community dynamics, and prepare for a critical programme review while balancing ecological goals with social impact.

20 min
13 questions
03
Peatland Carbon Restoration

Lead a flagship carbon sequestration initiative across 40,000 hectares of degraded peatland. Navigate contested measurement methodology, a pivotal landowner threatening withdrawal, and investor pressure — while maintaining scientific integrity under a hard deadline.

New
20 min
13 questions

Don’t encounter the SFL blind

The assessment is already live for 85-minute candidates across the US, UK, Germany, the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and Canada. If your invitation says 85 minutes, your preparation is incomplete without it.

Access the simulations →

SFL Practice is an independent study tool. Not affiliated with McKinsey & Company.

Scroll to Top
🛒
ago