As the audience, I think we are meant to assume that there actually was a ship in the scenario, stuck in the Neutral Zone and needing rescuing. But in this discussion we've just been going on the tongue-in-cheek hypothetical possibility I raised on the previous page, that in Saavik's test, the Kobayashi Maru vessel didn't really exist. After all, the (simulated) Enterprise never actually confirmed its existence on sensors or on visuals. They rushed into the Zone with no effort to confirm that what they were hearing on comms was real, and then sensors picked up the Klingon ships, but not the KM, and then the viewscreen showed the Klingon cruisers, while the KM was nowhere to be seen (disregarding real-world budgetary constraints that required re-use of existing footage).
Even if that was the case, it's still possible for the program to be adaptive based on the testee's course of action, and probably some random factors to make the scenario a little different each time. You take the test one week, and you are deep within the Zone and it turns out there is no Kobayashi Maru; it was all a Klingon ruse to lure you to your doom. So you take the test again next week thinking you've got it all figured out, and this time you stay outside the Zone to play it safe. But long-range sensors somehow detect that the ship was real after all right at the moment of its destruction, and comms pick up the helpless screams of the dying crew as they curse you with their last breath for not coming to their aid. So then you have another go the week after that, thinking that the very first test must have been a fluke, and you try to go into the Zone at Ludicrous Speed to get to the ship before the Klingons, but you get there just in time to see it get blown to smithereens. Or the Kobayashi Maru goes headfirst into an asteroid before you can get within transporter range. Etc., etc.,
ad nauseum.
Anyway, I was kinda joking about the vessel not actually existing.
Kor