How so? Whether you are target shooting or hunting repeatability and reliability are more important than glass quality.
Maybe I'm coming from a place of ignorance...Maybe it's generational.
If I'm using quality binoculars to spot game in shadows or in fading light and my riflescope cannot provide a comparable image, what does it matter that it's 'repeatable'?
What does repeatable even mean?
If I pull a rifle out of the safe and it doesn't shoot to point of aim every time, that's either a scope issue, mount issue, rifle issue or shooter issue.
I have a Tikka T3 in 7-08 that is my primary deer rifle. Every September it comes out of the safe, I slide a Nosler 140gr BT cartridge in the dirty chamber of the dirty barrel and pop a perfect 2" high bullseye at 100yds.
I'm MPBR out to 300+.
If that doesn't work, I need to be a better hunter.
It's never a different story...same thing every year since I've owned it...15 years? Nikon Monarch glass is excellent, on a par with my Nikon Premier LX binoculars.
That first cold-bore shot is the one that matters because that's the one that will count in the field.
Notice that I didn't mention my ballistics app on my phone and my windage value from my Kestrel 5700 and my custom turrets and my this that and theother.
Target shooters, especially competition shooters get wrapped up in screwing turrets to the point that it's an evolution of the video games they grew up with.
I would humbly submit it takes a more experienced shooter to eschew all the gadgetry and focus on making great shots with simpler equipment.