"Recoil relax and enjoy" KiethKilling power is down to a combination of caliber, bullet weight, velocity, placement, the size of the target, the amount of damage you inflict and just where that damage is.
That’s a lot of variables.
The argument over whether a big slow bullet or a small fast one is better started with the shift from black powder to nitro and got ramped up in the 50’s when Jack O Connor and Elmer Keith made a damn fine living sniping at each other.
Elmer was a legendary marksman, but a poor hunter, if he got a shot into the south end of a north bound elk and hit it at 500yds, he believed that the bullet should do its job and penetrate all the way to the lungs. He was also a tough old coot who wasn’t affected by recoil. The bigger the cartridge the better he liked it.
But the bullets he was using just weren’t up to the task.
Elmer thought that anything less than a.300 mag wasn’t enough, he championed the.338, even for deer.
Jack O Connor was on the other side of the fence, he liked the .270 and the 30/06, but he picked his shots.
He was also a better writer than Elmer, but that wasn’t difficult.
With decent marksmanship skills and a surgeon’s knowledge of anatomy you can kill big stuff with very small cartridges.
Most of us aren’t consistently good enough to do that most of the time, so we use something that will destroy more tissue to allow a bit of a margin for less than perfect placement.
All of the mid bore cartridges work well for deer sized targets, but over most of the globe, deer sized is 70Kg + .
Only in Britain do you consider varmint size creatures to be the equivalent of what the rest of us think of as deer.
As for Sweden roedeer are smallgame 222rem and similar fallow are biggame 6,5 cal and up.
