Well, as usual I am one that probably disagrees with a lot of you, but the reason is that I no longer do any competitive long range rifle shooting, and when I did it was at 600 and 1000 yards. 600 yards was done with a M14, (308/7.62 x 51) or at 1000 yards a Winchester Model 70 Match rifle in 300 H&H Magnum. As for the 6.5 Creedmoor, it's ok for punching paper, but for long range hunting it is very much inferior to the good old 270 Winchester, which at normal hunting ranges and out to about 800 yards on paper does just as well as the Creedmoor, this is despite there not being any match bullets available in .277. My Tikka T3x in 270 Winchester shooting 140 gr Nosler partitions shoots 0.8 inch groups on a regular basis out to at least 300 yards which is the longest range that I have regular access to. I've never tried the 140 gr Accubond, but I suspect that they might shoot tighter groups and if RDF bullets were available the 270 might give the 6.5 Creedmoor a run for it's money. Beyond 1000, I would suspect that the 6.5 would do better at punching paper, but since there are no super accurate bullets made in 270 that may never be proven. I have a Backstop recoil pad on my Tikka and there is very little difference in felt recoil between the two. Screw a muzzle brake onto the barrel and the 270 might even have less recoil than the Creedmoor. Maybe someone, some day will develop a high BC match bullet for the 270, would be interesting to put them head to head beyond 600 yards, simply because inside of 600 yards and at hunting distances the 6.5 Creedmoor is a baby sister to the 270.