I did the math one time... and Sniping the small Beards Limes from my tree, or sparrows... at 20yds with a simple BreakBarrel High-powered .22 cal AirRifle.. visually speaking... is about the same as what it'd look like to your eye... as placing the crosshairs on a deer-sized torso at 200yds. So it's a cheap form of practice in terms of you learning how to control you. The mechanics of your body, your breathing, etc. And... the trigger pull is kinda stiff on that AirRifle so it's actually an even better training aid since it's much harder to hold everything steady and the reticle on your desired aiming point thru the trigger squeeze... when it's a hard heavy trigger pull. Also that BreakBarrel is a bit heavy too, which is also a help for training since if you can hold a heavy setup decent enough freehand to make a certain shot... you most certainly can do that same shot with a better, nicer, lighter trigger pull and lighter rifle. And then you start trying to up the ante by placing even smaller targets up to hit... such as old AA batteries. Or... you put on a can and like try to put your pellet thru the a certain spot on the can, such as in the middle of a Letter "O" ... or you try to put the pellet right thru the sun icon on one of those orange aluminum bottles of ShockTop. Then you start practicing shooting off your minimalist shooting sticks, just like what you'd take with you into the field. And in field positions. But like I said, it's a heavier porker of a rifle, with a significantly stiffer trigger pull, so it helps you learn how to linearly increase the force on your trigger finger nice and steadily in a linear fashion, is if you were a robot, steadily increasing the force until it finally breaks, and without you introducing any waggle to the barrel from your trigger finger. Which is significantly harder to do with a crappy trigger like that. So once you master it with an inferior piece of equipment like that, it's a cake walk when like using the rifles with the AccuTrigger.