Hi mate, I need to know what you're feeding them with.
As long as you have good drainage, you'll never have any problems with water retention in coco - certainly not with the 30% perlite stuff - so that could be the issue. If you have left them in standing water, then yes, that could be the problem and it will affect overall plant health.
Being the smallest plant indicates nutrient excess and lockout - not deficiency - especially if other plants of the same strain are bigger and healthier and not showing the same symptoms with the same level of nutrient.
You also dried out the pot for three days, which would have increased the salt concentration.
The lower leaves are all dark green - that signifies plenty of nitrogen (otherwise it would be yellowing from the bottom up).
The new growth is being affected - not so much the old growth - which indicates a problem with less mobile nutrients. So it's not a magnesium deficiency.
If you are feeding with flowering nutes, or anything high in K, there is a possibility it is locking out calcium. Coco release potassium as it biodegrades, so there is the risk of potassium toxicity and it looks like this:
Phosphorous toxicity looks similar (they both lock out the same metals):
If you test your pH runoff, excess K should register lower pH coming out than going in.
I'm not entirely sold on humidity being the issue - sorry Random
- because I think drying out the pot would have been more detrimental, and all your other plants appear to be doing fine (plus evaporation from the pots will add to humidity inside your grow tent).
However, potassium toxicity is a very well-known issue in coco - especially if you are using flowering nutes all the way through. In a similar vein, many growers tend to overdo the phosphates, and this has a similar effect.
It is really hard to OD a pot plant on Ca - they can handle large amounts of calcium - so a Ca deficiency is much more common than toxicity.
Also, your plants don't use as much K in veg as NP, so it is more common at this stage and will clear up in flower.
This is going to sound counter-intuitive, but the trick in this situation is to feed at near full strength, but to water with a lot of runoff each watering so that excess K gets flushed out, but there is still plenty of NPCaMg etc in the mix.
Allowing pots to sit in runoff has the same effect as not flushing properly: the runoff evaporates in the tray and leaves salts to build up, which your plant then uptakes.
So, after you've told me what nutrients you're using, we'll come up with a mix and you can go ahead and water it through each day until your plant picks up again.