Best Long Range Scopes for Precision Shooting in 2026
We compared 5 precision scopes from $500–$2,000. At $700, tracking error can mean 3.6″ of miss at 1,000 yards – the Razor HD Gen III fixes that.
We compared 5 precision scopes from $500–$2,000. At $700, tracking error can mean 3.6″ of miss at 1,000 yards – the Razor HD Gen III fixes that.
Choosing between thermal, night vision, and IR illuminators can make or break your next hunt after dark.
We compared 5 BUIS sets from $35–$160 — and the Magpul MBUS Gen 3 wins. But first, zero your irons before mounting the optic, or they’re just decoration.
We compared 5 AR-10s from $1,000–$3,000 – but first, know this: DPMS and ArmaLite patterns don’t share parts. The Aero M5E1 leads our picks.
We tested 5 pistol red dots from $200–$500. Most new dot shooters lose half a second hunting for the dot — the Holosun 507C X2 fixes that fastest.
We compared 5 gas blocks from $18–$100 – most AR-15s run 20% over-gassed from the factory, and it gets worse with a suppressor. Here’s how to fix it.
We compared 5 EDC flashlights from $30–$120. A weapon light points your gun at everything you look at – a handheld doesn’t. The Streamlight ProTac 2L-X wins.
Glock ships a 10/10 reliable pistol with 6/10 sights and trigger. We ranked 5 upgrades by impact – sights first, trigger second – from $15 to $180.
We tested 5 pocket pistols from $250–$500. The Ruger LCP MAX wins – but 50 rounds through a 10 oz gun will teach you what “snappy” really means.
The A2 grip ships on nearly every AR-15, but its 70° wrist angle is killing your trigger press. We tested 5 grips from $15–$40 to fix that.