Your GMAT scores will depend on several characteristics of the questions presented to you, including difficulty level, your answers to those questions, and the number of questions you answer. The questions in an adaptive test are weighted according to their difficulty and other statistical properties, not according to their position in the test.
The GMAT exam yields four scores: Verbal, Quantitative, Total, and Analytical Writing Assessment. Each of these scores is reported on a fixed scale. Total scores range from 200 to 800, with about two-thirds falling between 400 and 600. Verbal and Quantitative scores range from zero to 60, although scores below 10 and above 50 are rare. The Verbal and Quantitative scores measure different constructs and are not comparable with each other. Analytical Writing scores, which range from zero to six, are computed separately from the scores for the multiple-choice sections of the test and have no effect on the Verbal, Quantitative, or Total scores. All questions regarding your GMAT scores must be directed to GMAT Customer Service in your region. Test center staff cannot answer questions about test scores, nor can they help you obtain your Official Score Report.