Form can answer directly. And there’s all sorts of opinions here. BUT I think most will agree that the more a gun recoils, the more potential poi shift is possible as a result. You already said this gun recoils significantly more than your others, ergo there is more potential for a poi shift caused by recoil management, and a greater potential shift in poi.
If you are contorting your body to see thru the scope as you said, at least for me, it makes it much harder to be consistent in my gun inputs, especially during recoil and for a subsequent shot. Try some 1/4” hard foam taped to the comb and see if it makes a difference. If it does, either lower rings or a permanent comb riser might just fix it for you. Or at least make it easier to do the practice that will fix it for you. Some of this may not be “proper” (cheek vs chin weld, depending on who you ask) but if you already have decades of muscle memory doing it one way and a pile of guns set up for that, it may be easier to run with it.
The drill mentioned earlier is helpful for seeing your field performance from various positions so that you can practice your weaknesses and see improvements, and make comparisons. Because as pointed out, range conditions are not reality. Its the “Form drill” or “hunting rifle drill”. I think of it as a field-focused version of a kraft drill. If you search it on this site you’ll find it eventually.