Me and my Son recently tested several different scopes from different manufacturers. We live and hunt here in Alabama where you can legally shoot 30 minutes before and after sunrise/sunset. So it is a benefit to have a scope that aids in closing the deal in those situations. Let me begin by stating that our informal and subjective testing could vary from another perspective. But I felt two sets of eyes were definitely better than just mine. But I do encourage one to draw up conclusions not solely based on our findings. Also there are some myths that need debunking. Such as purchasing an expensive and or large scope transforms night into day. Just don’t happen. I hear and read people stating their scope adds 20 or 30 minutes to their hunt. I’m not buying that at all. In our testing the better ones got you somewhere around 1-4 minutes advantage. This isn’t night vision / thermal. We did find that a larger objective holds an advantage over a smaller. Especially on higher powers. But even on lower powers we still felt the large objective is a benefit. A good example is if you have an 8x32 mm binoculars and put them up against a set of 8x56, to me it’s quite dramatic in how much brighter the 8x56 are. Of course you are dealing with a lot more exit pupil. And when we tested the scopes we put all on a 7mm exit pupil since that is the most our eyes can process. But even when a smaller objective was put on a power that equals 7mm we felt it wasn’t quite as bright as a larger one set to its 7mm exit pupil. My neighbor has a 20 acre field with no lights nearby. We put a 3D deer target at 125 yards and set up to watch about those last 30 minutes after sunset. We pushed into the dark to the point the human eye could in no way detect the 3D deer. These scopes were on rifles because you just don’t get as accurate results when hand holding a scope. I won’t go into every moment of the test but there were some scopes that did have a slight advantage over others. The scopes that were tested were Leupold VX5HD 3-15x44 Firedot Schmidt Bender Klassik 2.5-10x56 L3 illuminated, Kite K4 HD 3-12x50 illuminated 4A, Swarovski Z6i HD 2.5-15x56 4 illuminated,Trijicon Accupoint 2.5-10x 56 mildot illuminated, and Hawke Endurance 2.5-10x50 illuminated 4 reticle. The top performers were the Schmidt Bender,Trijicon Accupoint and Swarovski Z6i. They rung out every ounce of available light and did it very well. There was to our eyes no distinction between the 3. We could not say there was any advantage at all between those 3 other than the Trijicon had the smallest illuminated dot. And that was an advantage. The S&B dot actually gets larger as crank the power due to being a First Focal Plane Reticle. That was a strike against it. What was a surprise to me is that the Trijicon was actually to me the best choice. The lenses are made by Meopta. And if you know Meopta then you know they produce some high quality glass. The turrets are Japanese and all is assembled in America. The Accupoint weighs 4 ounces less than the Swarovski and S&B. Another plus. No Batteries for the Accupoint which is another plus. One other point. If you plan to shoot late an illuminated reticle is really a must. You just wash out at a certain point without illumination. The real selling point for the Trijicon is price. You can buy 4 and have money left over vs. Swarovski. Is the Swarovski a fine optic? Without a doubt. It in our minds just doesn’t justify the cost. My second choice would be the S&B. Superb optics at a bargain. These can be had for around $1200.