$1.$ This is easy, the fact you didn't answer it correctly is probably due to not understanding the question. Person $1$, let's call her Alice, wins the tournament in $3$ games if she wins Games $1$, $2$, and $3$. We are assuming independence, so the probability is $(0.6)^3$.
$2.$ The tournament lasts exactly $3$ games if Alice wins Games $1$, $2$, and $3$, or Betty does. The probability Betty does is $(0.4)^3$, so our required probability is $(0.6)^3+(0.4)^3$.
$3.$ This is more complicated. The tournament lasts exactly $4$ games if (i) Alice wins the $4$th game, and exactly $2$ of the other $3$ or (ii) Betty wins the $4$th game, and exactly $2$ of the other $3$.
For (i), winning $2$ of the first $3$ can happen in the patterns WWL, WLW, and LWW. Each of these has probability $(0.6)^2(0.4)$. Multiply by $3$ because of the $3$ different ways. We get $3(0.6)^2(0.4)$. Multiply by the probability Alice wins the $4$th game. We get $3(0.6)^3(0.4)$.
We get a similar expression for (ii), reversing the roles of $0.6$ and $0.4$. Add: we get $3(0.6)^3(0.4)+3(0.4)^3(0.6).$
$4.$ This is a sum of the probabilities that Alice wins in $3$, in $4$, and in $5$. We already know the answers to the first two: $(0.6)^3$ and $3(0.6)^3(0.4)$ respectively. I will leave to you to find the probability Alice wins in $5$. Hint: She has to win the $5$th game, and exactly $2$ of the first $4$.
$5.$ Hint: It has something to do with the answers to $1$ and $4$. The key word is conditional probability.
In symbols, let $A$ be the event "Tournament lasts $3$ games" and $B$ the event "Alice wins tournament." We want $\Pr(A|B)$.
$6.$ Again, a conditional probability.
After you have worked on the problems for a while, perhaps I can add to the hints. Would need to know what you have been exposed to about conditional probability.
Remark: In case you are not familiar with the tournament setup, here is an explanation of how it works. As soon as one person has won $3$ games, the tournament is over. So the tournament can last $3$, $4$, or $5$ games. If some person wins Games $1$, $2$, and $3$, the tournament is over, no more games are played.