That’s a great advice, i actually never had the need to do small groups at the range of not for testing rifle/load and for occasional training (but in this case i shoot steel more than paper). I don’t enjoy it at all.
I never did expensive tests in the field because results were consistent, now it’s time to do them, after putting a cheek riser maybe
If you can hit 4-8” steel plates at distances you plan to hunt at, from positions you’d likely hunt from then I wouldn’t worry about it.
A few years ago my moose hunting buddy met me at the range before heading out to hunt, he was like “why are you shootng from the bench? Your gun shoots now do some damn practice”. Now before moose season I just shoot steel plates off hand from 100-200yds. Unless I’m forgetting something, 100% of the shots I’ve taken on moose were off hand or seated off my knees, I’m glad o practice those shots even though I don’t do it as much as I should.
That same idea has paid off on other hunts too. And I think most guys would be better served actually practicing rather than just shooting paper. I’ve seen a friend miss a caribou at 250yds then go on to talk about how his gun shot 1” groups. Those small target groups are neat but they really only demonstrate what the gun can do, not necessarily what the shooter can do.
There was a thread a few years back and it gets bumped from time to time but it’s about practice rather than equipment acquisition, there was a printable target with 3 circles of different sizes and a prescribed drill that (I’m probably remembering wrong) had you shoot seated, off hand and prone.
For me, that shooting drill was very telling because I could shoot little groups for a bench but I’d miss paper at 100yds when not fully supported. I upped my actual practice with the guns I had and started being honest with myself about my skill.
I’m still no expert but switching the focus of what I was doing at the range has paid dividends over the past 5 or so years.
While I’m ranting on, I’ve seen first hand guys miss animals with super expensive guns and scopes because of a lack of real world practice. The first time I hinted aoudad, I saw a guy go home empty handed because he couldn’t make a 300yd shot off shooting sticks without rear rifle support. Sounds like an easy shot but doing it under pressure with zero practice on an animal that may or may not be sitting still adds to the challenge.