I have killed dozens of animals past 50 yards, mostly whitetail. The furthest was 64 yards. I had some weird stuff happen that swung both ways past 50 yards. I shot a doe quartering away at 57.5 and the shot looked perfect. The arrow stuck in the offside scap. I'm not sure what I hit, but she was 4 feet straight in the air stone dead almost instantly. She never took a step. Another doe at 61 yards, the shot was right through the middle of the lungs. She was in a field and I watched her go down. She appeared to have expired but got back up as I approached and was alive for a couple more minutes. That one was pretty traumatic for me.I can’t think of a situation where I would be tempted to shoot an elk past 40yds on the first shot. I practice a lot further, but I prefer to keep it simple in the woods
The last Friday of the season I had the bull I’ve been trying to kill the last 3 years, for 5+ minutes quartered away @ 62yds, I have 100% confidence that bull would have been dead inside 100yds, but what if?
When I was younger, I shot a bull at 54yds that was 100% calm and feeding, he took a step as I shot and I hit him probably 8” back (luckily it was in a clear cut and I still watched him die) that’s always stuck with me, even though I’m way better at reading animal behavior, I want them closer…
It really makes me cringe when someone talks about their first archery critter past 75yds, seems like early in your archery hunting career is the worst time to be shooting long bombs.
At the end of the day, it’s up to the individual, some people are excellent shots, and excellent under pressure… most people are neither, and most aren’t as good as they think they are
My best advice is never shoot out of desperation, you will almost certainly regret it. It’s fair to say, your worst arrows at any range will likely be similar to shots in the woods hunting, it’s always a place you’ve never shot before, possibly uneven terrain, and your form will not be what it is in the back yard.
Only you can know how far you are comfortable shooting, everyone is at a different skill level
Eventually, I realized that nearly all of the odd stuff was happening past 50 yards and that became my max range for whitetail. I can shoot pretty fair groups at 90 yards and keep them in the kill zone of a deer target at 100 yards. I would never consider shooting past 50 now unless it was a follow up shot on an animal that is already hit.