All I'll say about that is that you need to be doing that while you're young...and/or still have young eyes. At least with A2 style irons, or really anything else with a very short eye-to-front sight radius, you need to have excellent acuity, and durability of that acuity throughout a day on the range. Blood sugar, astigmatism, dehydration, neurological status, eyebrow "build", medications, eye hydration, and personal stress levels are just a few of the things that can drastically affect your performance on irons, even from 7:30 am until 5 pm on the same day.
Really, those things affect shooters on scopes as well, but it's less likely to be noticed quickly...gee, imagine that: scopes make shootering more-easier...
But if you wanna shoot irons, best be doin' it. It's not an old man's game, and it's not something you learn overnight.
That said, irons can cut down on the time to improve some aspects of shooting where a scope actually handicaps your development, they put hair on your chest, and they are very rewarding when you can steer 'em pretty good.
Who knows...might come in handy someday, too.
Sad, but shooting my old 40x with the old period correct apertures, I can't hit well anymore aiming at small and odd shaped targets(steel), especially as the sun moves, changing lighting, and causing shadows to shift. I can see and shoot large round black bulls decently but I don't do that much because I don't shoot those kind of matches anymore. A year ago I could, but - age and eyes getting funky.
So I decided I'd get a Athlon 1-4.5x24 service rifle scope to make better use of the 40x. It has adjustable side focus parallax which I like and I can hit those targets I was talking about much more often. Plus it's more appropriate I think, short of buying an expensive old Unertal.
Man, the most severe mirage I've seen through a scope is shooting prone in a cinder pit that has black cinders! This place is 7 minutes from my house so it's convenient but I have to get there just before the sun rises - or else.
Op, everything has compromises, decide on the application and buy the scope to suit it with the least compromises.
Story - I used to use my S&B 3-20 on my rimfire that I use for NRL22. One time we had paper targets with darker colors that were placed father out. I could see the bullet holes when I hit out of the darker higher scoring area but when I corrected I couldn't see where exactly in the 8, 9, or 10 ring I hit???!!! Darn if it didn't cost me the match that day! So I put my S&B 5-25 on that rifle and using 25x I haven't had trouble seeing where I've hit.
Since I will likely never have this scope below 10x??? for the "application" of NRL22, the choice I've made has no downsides to it, and actually the extra weight of the 5-25 helps when shooting off of obstacles so it provides 1 more benefit as well.
I have a SFP 4-16x40 on my little carbine coyote rifle. 20 cal 32 grainers at 3735 fps, so out to 300Y I can hold on a yotes body. I also use this for other varmints and for shooting steel. I chose SFP and a thick-ish mildot reticle to pick up the reticle quickly and easily on 4x, taking advantage of the wider FOV in the junipers. I like using holdovers a lot so I put it on 10x for that purpose, which is where mils are correct, purpose is mostly for shooting steel. I put it on 16x to check zero or to dial for when I need to see better for shooting long range. Again - "application" I wanted a lightweight, lower mag variable scope for hunting, and other uses.
That S&B 3-20 I mentioned, even though it is a far superior scope, doesn't work well for me because the H59 reticle isn't well suited on 3-4x for fast snap shot shooting. And now it's extra weight has become a downside if it were used on that little rifle.
If I were a Benchrest or F-class shooter, I'd get a very high mag variable scope, like a 10-50 or similar, also with 1/8th minute turret adjustments. In F-class the scoring rings are spaced in moa, and in BR it's all about exact bullet placement so 50x or whatever comes in handy. "application".
For 3 gun or close in self defence, you can take a guess which type of scope to use. I'd personally pick a RD for self defence and I'd pick a 1x-?x for 3 gun.