I will throw my opinion in on this, and that opinion is based on my discussions with Andrew W @ SHOT.
As many know, I have been highly critical of the original Premier line, and that criticism was not just on the internet, I have addressed it in person on more than one occasion.
That said, I was able to talk to Andrew @ Shot and go over the punch list of things they addressed with the new TT Line.
Before I start, understand, they didn't just rescue the Premier line, they built a whole new product and facility around the Launch the scope with the TT name. They built an entire infrastructure behind it. So, now that this scope is getting ready to be released, I believe it needs to be separated from the original product and original company. It's apples and oranges now. Remember too this is not their first venture into scopes. They have a history of working with optics.
My discussion focused on the mechanics of the scope. I wanted to know what was addressed and how it was addressed, with specifics. He was all too happy to explain front to back what they did to remedy any lingering problems found in the Premier line. He went over the turret redesign, as well as other elements like the parallax. This is key, they didn't pretend there wasn't bugs in the original, he took them on head on. it was priority one.
The price point is in keeping with Tier One optics, it started with the Trijicon which first crossed the $4k mark, then you had the Hensoldt, with S&B following close behind. Clearly these companies understand the end user is more informed and is looking at things on a whole new level. So in order to keep the quality and viability of the company the costs are going up. No longer can they cut corners. Many of these companies recognize this, look at Leupold, their 25x scope is 2.5x the cost of the Mark 4 line. Nightforce, the BEAST is up there with cost. That trend is easy to see, and understand.
It's pretty easy to sit back and criticize this companies. Especially when they move beyond our financial reach. That tends to piss a lot of people off, and I get it. Hell when I got the Hensoldt 3-26x I wanted to hate it, but found I really like the scope. I wanted to hate it because, "how dare they charge $7k" it was my initial reaction before even touching the scope. Put it your hand and you go, "wow, that's good".
I have been quietly telling people the TT is gonna be the one to watch. Sure there are a lot of quality products out there, Vortex, NF, Kahles, S&B, etc, the list is certainly long. But that is because each new scope has to out do the top dog from the year before. Yes we can split hairs when it comes to our opinions, one guy favors the S&B, the other the Hensoldt, the next guy the March, and the value minded love the Vortex. But in the end we win doesn't matter what you favor. We have a greater variety than every before. When I started SH you had 4 choices, NF with the NXS in SFP, Leupold Mk IV, US Optics or S&B that was it... Nothing else worked for the Tactical Shooter. Consider that list today and you'll see why the prices are climbing and the quality is at a level never seen previously. I see these comparison as trying to decide a winner by fractions of a second without the luxury of a stop watch. It's that close, in fact too close to call with any certainty.
It's easy to dislike something you haven't put hands on, we all do for a variety of reason. But I see this scope as the next true contender.