Everyone wants to post what happens when shit goes right, no one wants to post when shit goes wrong.
I have no problem with posting what happens when things go wrong.
On the last couple of years-
Elk, 300 PRC, 212gr ELD-X, 984 yards. 14 shots with 3 hits. Once in the stomach, twice in the hips. The hunter wounded the elk right at the start, so this was trying to put it down. Rifle also malfunctioned repeatedly- trigger locked up, failure to feeds, failure to eject, etc. elk moved about 20 yards and stood there. Two of use hiked back to the truck to get another rifle, as the hunter had run out of ammo. Came back and two hits with a 6XC and 115gr DTACS at 970 yards, one breaking the “shoulder”, and elk fell over. Total time from first hit with 300 PRC to when we arrived back with the 6XC- about 48 minutes. Total time until falling dead from first shot with the 6XC- about 30 seconds. Hunter flinched horribly with 300 PRC despot muzzle break and ear protection. Also extreme problem of finding and the losing the animal in the scope due to high magnification. I turned the scope on the 6xc to 8x and would not let him turn it up- no problems with finding and keeping the elk in the scope including during recoil.
Elk, 300 PRC 225gr ELD-M, 636 yards. Flinched and missed by feet hitting another legal elk in the neck.
Elk 6cm 108gr ELD-M, 636 yards. Dropped at the shot. Shot penetrated liver, and into the stomach. Got up after 10-15 seconds and slowly walked about 70 yards before a second shot was out into both lungs. Elk went down, when we walked up the head was still up, and a shot to the neck ended it. Total distance traveled after the first poor shot was about 70 yards and a couple minutes. Shooter had lots of problems finding the elk in the scope with magnification too high.
Elk- 430 yards, 223 77gr TMK. First shot was as the elk started walking, stomach into the femur- breaking femur. Elk moved about 70-80 yards and laid down with a log covering it’s whole body except it’s head. Extremely new and very excited hunter. Several shots were missed until calming down and putting one in the back of the head at 450+/- yards. About two minutes total.
2x Elk, 6XC 112gr Barnes MatchBurner, 80 yards. Through liver and and into stomach. Ran 80’ish yards and laid down. Follow up shot through both lungs and done. Less than two minutes. This was two elk, first was standing through pines, second one ran through opening after the first shot. Both had nearly identical shot location, both with the same bullets, and both laid down within 50 yards of each other.
Elk, 300 PRC 225gr ELD-M, 320 +/- yards, hit spine and dropped elk. Elk was still trying to regain its feet. Moved up to tree about 100 yards from it and a head shot ended it. Total distance travels after the spine shot was 0 feet, and elk tried to regain its footing for approximately two minutes before head shot.
Mule Deer, 300WM 190gr SMK, 284 yards IIRC. Scope catastrophically failed. 8 shots I believe- first shot was stomach. Also hit leg, hip, and two in the chest. Deer moved about 150-200 yards. Total time standing was more than 10 minutes.
I’ve watched several bull elk take poor first shots, but the shooters were skilled amd immediately followed up with lung shots. They just stood there after the first liver/stomach hits for the 2’ish seconds it took for a follow up shot/shots.
Well over 100 deer gut shot with 300 and 338 mags, with bullets ranging from Hornady 150gr soft points to Partitions, SMK’s, AMAX’s, Barnes X, TSX, and TTSX’s, and about anything else one could name. The deer shot poorly with AMAX’s tended to not travel far generally. Those shot with everything else usually resulted in an extremely long tracking job.
4 out of the last 10 game animals I’ve seen a 30cal magnum used on have been rodeos/ misses or wounding.
Juxtapose all that with somewhere around 250 game animals from antelope to bull Moose from 20 yards to 803 yards with 223’s and 77gr TMK’s. The first poor shot was right at the 200 animal mark, at 440+/- yards on a buck antelope and just scraped the bottom of the chest cavity breaking the leg. Pronghorn walked onto private land approximately 800-1,000 yards. We received permission to go get him, and a single shot from about 120 yards dropped him. The only other poor shot was the one relayed above. So two game animals out of 250, with multiple elk past 400 yards.