I know NOTHING about high end scopes. I own 4 Vortex PST scopes and 1 Athlon Ares...all of which I like a lot. For $300 I picked up an Interarms Mark X rifle in 270...WITH A ZEISS DIAVARI C 3-9 SCOPE on it. The glass in that scope seems SO much better than my other scopes.
Why don't I see anyone discussing the Zeiss line when they talk about higher end scopes?
As was mentioned, Zeiss scopes are marketed for the hunter. I think they are behind the times, or maybe the majority of hunters are behind the times. Either way, they do not make a scope to my knowledge that blends well with other "tactical" style scopes people might have, such as FFP, mil-based reticles, trustworthy target turrets, etc. So having one system of scope on a competition or tactical rifle and then another system on a hunting rifle doesn't do anyone any favors. I do not understand why most scope manufacturers do not understand this.
But times are changing and the long range hunters are leading the charge. I hope the scope companies begin to market towards folks like me who grew up buying a mid-priced Leupy for a hunting rifle, setting the zero, and then God forbid, never, ever moving the turrets again, but have since began shooting long range and made the switch to solid FFP/Mil scopes (S&B, Nightforce, Minox) and are looking to replace all their old SFP/MOA scopes on their hunting rifles to match their current competition rifles with lighter/shorter scopes with "tactical" features and turrets they can trust.
Saying that, I have owned several Zeiss over the years and they were solid for basic point-and-shoot scopes. The old Conquest 4-14x50 with target turrets had bright glass and a very forgiving eyebox and punched way above its weight class, even though it just had a basic plex reticle with no zero stop or locking turrets. And I still have a little Conquest V4 1-4 with a locking elevation turret on a 300 BLK that I enjoy, and a Zeiss Diavari on a 308 hunting rifle that is OK (but has fish eye on low power). However since making the switch from SSP/MOA to FFP/Mils on my target rifles, I will no longer buy these types of scopes again, and I can only assume most folks on the Hide feel the same way.
If you still rock SFP/MOA on your competition rifles, then it is not a big deal I suppose.