The way a sighting system works is the sight would be 'zeroed' to a set distance e.g the centre aim point could be zeroed to 50 yards. If you are closer to a target than 50 yards, the rounds/arrows would actually be going low. This is because the site on the bow/rifle is higher than the arrow or barrel. So the projectile is actually on a slightly upward journey and will intersect at the 'zero' mark. So if you are shooting at say 20 or 30 yards with a weapon zeroed at 50 yards, you would use the mill dots above the centre dot. Hope this makes sense.
Thanks for the advice from last week’s video I got this game and really enjoy playing it I got a legendary elk and a legendary big horn sheep both today love the videos keep up the awesome work
ik i’m 10 months late here and idk if anyone said this already but you can call in a bear or other game like cougar, wolf, etc with a predator caller just in case you play the game again i thought this might help
Hunting Simulator 1 & 2 really aren’t great, so I’d stay away from them. theHunter: Call of the Wild is pretty good. It’s not super realistic, it’s a lot more of an arcade-like game. Although it’s pretty glitchy because the developers don’t fix a lot of things. theHunter: Classic is old so it doesn’t have great graphics but it’s by far the most realistic/hardcore hunting game out there. It’s fun, there’s a huge learning curve but once you get past that it’s great fun. theHunter: Classic is only on PC though so if you’re on console you’re out of luck.
@@Flintergaming dallas gonna win. Biased aside, dallas is hungry cause of that defeat last year and you don't think we forgot about juju dancing on our logo. Plus you got Mason Rudolph as your qb and not ben