Different strokes and all. I prefer NRL hunter and field style matches. Square range, known distance is boring to me.
I wouldn't even be opposed to hiding the targets in the shadows and making us range and dope our own targets on every stage. Where it crosses the line for me is making someone do that "on the clock." A shooting competition is about delivering the shots, not about trying to figure out how fast a person can read their ballistics app. For me, it needs to be about the marksmanship and all of the time "on the clock" needs to be spent delivering the shot.
It’s not stupid, it’s just a more complete test of the skills that go into using a rifle in the field.
Though I’ll admit that what I’ve heard about CD holding matches over and over again without moving targets around was pretty stupid, if true (and supposedly they’ve fixed that going forward).
For me, Find, Range, & Engage matches are a lot more enjoyable than PRS. At a PRS match the RO shows me all of the targets, reads the ranges, and I get to watch 10 other dudes shoot at them (and collaborate with each other to come up with their wind calls & stage plans) before it’s my turn to shoot. It was fun for a couple of years, but now it’s just tedious and boring. And the amount of crybaby bullshit from guys who think it’s nascar is sometimes irritating.
The rush I get from shooting blind stages and relying solely on my own skills to find and hit targets is much better, precisely because it’s hard. The feeling of accomplishment I get from shooting a blind stage clean is also a lot higher than when cleaning a stage at a PRS match.
PRS has its place. For me and some of my shooting buddies that place was learning to shoot well enough that I could move on to UKD field matches. For others PRS is a perfect fit, and good for them.
I don't drive 600 miles to have a "complete test of skills that go into using a rifle 'in the field.'" In fact, I don't even know what "field" you're talking about. I don't have a sniper fetish despite the name of this website. The only "skill" I'm looking to test is delivering a shot to the target under whatever conditions are mandated. If you want me to range the targets off the clock, fine, I have verified DOPE at any distance I'd shoot any of my rifles. But making competitors do that on the clock and then using that to create time pressure ruins the shooting part of the competition for me, which is ALL I care about. Especially nowadays where a laser rangefinder gives you a precise range estimation, range estimation is no longer a skill and is simply running an appliance. Shooting from awkward ass positions at 2 MOA targets in the wind and under time pressure is plenty challenging.
I get zero rush from "blind" stages and after nearly 20 years doing this, I can't see the fascination. You want a blind stage? Enter the lottery and pull an elk tag. You can hike in the mountains, spend nearly all your time glassing for targets "on the clock" and if you're lucky enough to have an opportunity to take a shot, your entire marksmanship challenge will be that one shot. Bonus is that you might get something cool to mount on your wall and you'll certainly have something to eat. If that's your idea of fun (spending a ton of money and time to maybe get nothing at all), you'll love it and you'll get plenty of exercise in the process.
I have never shot PRS. The entry fees alone suggest it's not for me.
Games are fun when they are fair and challenge the things competitors want to see. Having shot a lot of shooting sports, there are a lot of things that I've learned are not games I wish to compete in, e.g., shoving shotgun shells in a magazine tube, looking through binoculars in hopes of finding the hidden targets, walking through a "stage" not knowing what or where the targets are or what the shooting challenge is, walking through a stage and memorizing the stage design so I don't forget to shoot certain targets, etc. The most fun games for me are the simple ones where it comes down to whether you have the skill to consistently put the points on the board or not. Even the best rifle shooter I know missed quite a few targets yesterday, all it takes is the right time pressure and difficult enough shooting positions. Those games will show you who has the skills to stay calm and deliver the shot and who doesn't.
You're all welcome to your opinions and this is mine. I don't want to shoot your blind stages, I don't want to reload a shotgun on the clock, I don't want to look for targets when I came to shoot, I don't want to shoot against people who know where the targets are because they shot your other event earlier this year even though the stages are supposed to be "blind," and I'm getting to the point where I don't want to pay your entry fees so that the people at the top can get all the donated prizes. I'd rather show up and shoot for plaques only or have the donated stuff given away at random. After all, the winners and the losers all had to pay to get there, house themselves, develop their loads, practice, etc.
I think the next frontier for me might even be a rifle game where they limit the equipment you're allowed to use, as in, you get 1-2 shooting bags and a bipod and nothing else.