All FFP scopes will suffer during low light shooting. This is one of the weaknesses of the design. The reticles are hard to see when dialed down and the scopes themselves tend to transmit less light through which costs me a few minutes of low light visibility which can make or break a hunt. If low light shooting is priority #1 then pass for a dedicated hunter. If low light is further down the list then I am sure it will be a great choice. If your hunting is 300 and in, I would pass on a FFP scope for that purpose as well.
I have yet to find a FFP scope in any price range that bests a $250 leupold in most hunting situations. The Razor gen ii, Steiner M5xI, LRTSI, SWFa 5-20, just to name a few give up several minutes of low light shooting to Low to midpriced SFP hunting scopes. It may be due to the design that FFP scopes just don’t permit as much light through the scope. Maybe other guys with real life hunting experience using both will chime in with their opinions.
Yesterday morning I had several axis come out 10 minutes after sunrise and left 5 minutes later before I could verify my target. I could not be 100% certain at that time that I had a doe to shoot and not a yearling spike. Had I had a Leupold or better yet Swarvski scope, i probably could have taken the shot. Hell if I had some lower power binoculars to verify I could have made the shot. I was using a LrTSI 4.5-18. Great FFP hunting scope but has it’s weaknesses just as a thick SFP duplex reticle scope has it’s weakness and limitations. The latter scope would have been ideal in this hunting location as ranges are short where my LrTSI is ideal when I hunt other places due to longer shots being possible. Pick the right tool for the job. The good news is yesterday evening I downed two axis does.