Yes, that's everything, including food, the clothes I'm wearing, and water for the hike in.
Attached is my full gear list from last year's opening week archery elk hunt in Colorado. Total weight was 65 lbs (6 lbs worn clothing/boots + 59 lbs in backpack or carried in hand).
• Clothing (including boots) = 11.0 lbs
• Miscellaneous tools/accessories = 10.8 lbs
• Tent, sleeping bag & pad = 9.6 lbs
• Bow & other hunting-specific gear = 9.2 lbs
• Food = 8.3 lbs
• Backpack, dry bags, stuff sacks = 7.4 lbs
• Water storage/purification & 1 qt to drink during hike in = 4.4 lbs
• First aid, medicinal, hygiene items = 2.4 lbs
• Cooking gear = 2.0 lbs
Based on a quick scan of that list, I could easily eliminate ≈9 lbs of non-essential or unused items:
• Pistol, holster, ammo = 2.8 lbs (reassuring to have in black bear country but not necessary)
• Redundant/unnecessary clothing = 2.6 lbs (including gaiters which I didn't use because they made my legs too hot)
• Hatchet = 1.3 lbs (nice to have around camp for driving stakes & cutting firewood but definitely not necessary)
• Solar panel = 1.1 lbs (not needed, pre-charged power bank was sufficient to keep GPS/phone batteries topped off)
• Misc luxury items = 1.0 lbs (coffee, coffee mug, lemonade powder, bathing wipes)
Gear swaps that could reduce weight:
• Bivy sack/tarp instead of tent ≈ 2 lbs
• 10-20°F down sleeping bag instead of 0°F synthetic ≈ 2 lbs
• Lighter 100L backpack (e.g., Stone Glacier, Exo) or lower volume pack ≈ 1-2 lbs
• Thinner foam sleeping pad instead of insulated inflatable pad ≈ 0.5 lbs
• Steripen instead of Katydyn pump filter ≈ 0.5 lbs
If I made all those eliminations/swaps, I would be at 50 lbs all-in. A little more refinement and I could probably get into the 40's.