Which 3-15x44 scope - Leupold VX5 vs Vortex Viper, etc

I’d personally put together a hunting rifle and range rifle separate, instead of trying to marry the two. You’ll just end up there in the long run so do it now and save yourself. I’m assuming this will be primarily a hunting rifle. If your shots are under 200 hunting then put a 2-8 or 3-9x40 on it. Capped turrets would be fine Leopold or Vortex are fine if it’s a gun that’s just hiked to the tree stand or blind from the truck. In the future, get a 223 or 6.5 for a range gun and put a higher mag scope on it.
I don't disagree. I think this train of thought certainly has merit, but I have a lot of other expenses to consider and putting together 2 dedicated rifle set ups is not in the cards now. And correct - I'd say 70/30 hunting to target focused.
The gun will be a T3X superlight in 6.5CM (*gasp*) so I think it will do both nicely.
I’ll echo @blackhawk219 ‘s advice, I have vortex and leupold in my safe, using them successfully for less rigorous hunting. However, when spending more money, especially at and above $500, I expect and want durability. Given your specs, that scope will be something that can be used all over the country, thus, it will be nice to know you have something on the more durable end of the spectrum should a particular hunt present itself.

In short, the right tool for the right job
I'm on the same page with that train of thought. I am a buy once cry once kinda guy.... to a point. I'd have a hard time spending more than say $1,500 on a scope, but I do appreciate quality optics. I don't feel my ability and budget right now warrants spending any more than that, and even that is probably a bit spendy for me.
Maven RS1.2 2.5-15x
Seeing this recommended now a few times, assuming for good reason, so I'll add it to the list. I'm not brand loyal but I haven't handled any or looked at maven optics in a while.
 
Another thing I've found eye opening is the alarming number of folks here that have had bad experiences with Leupold.
How can such a well-established company be known for churning out (seemingly) unreliable tracking optics and yet commanding such prices, I wonder...
Are they just a good marketing machine these days or are they still the box store gold standard?
 
Another thing I've found eye opening is the alarming number of folks here that have had bad experiences with Leupold.
How can such a well-established company be known for churning out (seemingly) unreliable tracking optics and yet commanding such prices, I wonder...
Are they just a good marketing machine these days or are they still the box store gold standard?

Most people don’t shoot very much. Many more baby their rifles. And they are the box store gold standard.

Explaining to my dad that I had a rifle scope that retained zero when it fell off the truck was fun. Every time he sees my Trijicons and SWFA’s he asks me how I afford them and I have to remind him they are less than most of the competition.
 
I currently have a Viper and it's served me well - granted I'm not dialing it, nor have I dropped it to find out if it'll lose zero.... my time might be coming with it, but I have faith Vortex's warranty would take care of me based on past experience.

I did look into that Credos.... that's now on the list! Almost exactly what I'd want.
I used to have 4 Vortex scopes at one point, viper HS 4-16x44, strike eagle LPVO, diamondback 3-9 & a crossfire 3-9. They were great when I was fresh out of high school and was needing my own glass but I played hell for years keeping any of them zeroed on my 300, 270 & muzzleloader.

For a budget scope (sub $600) I’ll ride for the VX3s but if you’re playing in the $800-$1000 range a Credo is a hard scope to beat.
 
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