Debates like this often become either circular, polarise, or even alienate members of the forum and that's a great shame. FWIW, I think that some of the more salient points have been missed, and not a little, by those on opposing sides of this debate because of entrenched views on "what makes a stalker" or why the prowess of shooting small groups matters. It isn't the groups size that matters; it's the shooter's ability and skill in the field and it's pretty much a given despite what some seasoned stalkers might think, that the more skilled shots are those who can with great confidence, and without (necessarily) the aid of sticks for example, can cleanly take an animal every shot, in all conditions to about 300 yards every time humanely.
There's a book that one or two of you may have come across called the Gun Digest "Shooter's Guide to Rifle Marksmanship" written by Peter Lessler, a very well respected hunter and a very well respected shot.
In that book, he teaches the basics of dying skills such as shooting using a loop sling from various field positions, shooting using field expedient rests (trees, rocks, your rucksack etc) and things like skill in range finding, reading the wind, and above all building competency for a human kill first shot every shot. He doesn't advocate long range sniping and concedes that those capable of pulling off such shots first time represent possibly one or two percent of all shooters, not the vast majority that think they can snipe from 500 yards with modern kit. It's not that easy now and never was.
He makes some very interesting observations, such as writing off shooters he witnesses making shots in the field using steadies such as bipod/tripod sticks who don't demonstrate in their shooting first and foremost that the aid is only acting as an extra steady. He's rather disingenuous towards such shots claiming that he can say with confidence straight away that "that guy cannot shoot". Foremost should be skill already honed to steady shooting technique, using slings or correct body position or both, without which some shooters just plonk a rifle on sticks such that the rifle see-saws over the fulcrum little steadier than if the rest weren't there at all! He notes positions taken on standing off-hand shots, particularly the positioning of the bolt hand for a rapid follow up shot, the cheek weld and stance for steadiness etc. These seem to me to be skills that many shooters just aren't developing these days, and there's no shortcut to gaining them other than practice.
A good competent shot, he claims, should off-hand, using a sling or other field expedient rest or from sitting in one of several prescribed steady positions, should shoot at least 2moa at 300 yards. I've seen some people shooting from bipods at the range who can't manage that!
He also states that in spite of technology, what happens when your rangefinder battery goes flat on the hill, or your annomometer battery does the same. There's some interesting and useful pointers such as the USA Army's WW11 guide "Marksmanship with the M1 rifle, Part 2" (google is your friend), to accurately determining wind strength and depending on cartridge, rule of thumb for windage allowance at 100, 200 and 300 yards. Determining the wind strength is essential once past 200 yards, and guesswork is not good enough unless informed. The aforementioned guide goes something like this: Take a piece of dry grass or a leaf and drop it from shoulder height. Point with a straight arm to where it falls. The horizontal angle from your body is wind direction, and the angle between your arm and your body divided by 4 is roughly the wind speed in mph. Then take the range to target in 100 yards (200 yards becomes "2" for example), multiply that by wind speed and divide by a constant which should be approx 10 (derived from wind drift resistance of a 150 grain hunting bullet, 30 cal) for cartridges such as the 30-06 or 270, about the same for .308, and about 7 for smaller lower BC cartridges such as the .223. the answer is your minutes of angle windage compensation for that cartridge at that range. If your batteries go flat, then you'll find little snippets like this invaluable guides, remembering to 3/4 values at 45 degrees or less to the angle of the line of sight, and half values for shallower angles such as 11, 1, 5 and 7 o'clock winds.
He also repeatedly mentions stalking and keeping downwind out of scent, so you see, all of this matters. Your rifle's condition and fit, your skill with not just the rifle on a still day plonking three shots into a bit of paper at 100 yards and saying "that'll do" because really, that will not do on it's own. The truth, as with all these debates, it ALL matters. Your rifle accuracy, the quality of your sights mounts, the fit of your rifle, your skill in using it first and foremost WITHOUT shooting aids like sticks to build muscle memory and knowledge of how to shoot steadily from prone, kneeling, sitting and standing, your ability to shoot using field expedient rests, then using sticks etc but applying them as additional steadies, not the sole arbiter of your ability. Shooting a good, accurate rifle that is capable with your limitations being taken into account without artificial rests, of 2moa at 300 yards in windy conditions matters. A rifle that cannot shoot into 6 or 7 inches at 300 yards has no place on a stalk at those distances. All of this matters EXCEPT being kit obsessed. Whether you use a Browning X-Bolt, a CZ, a Tikka, Mauser or Blaser is all pretty much irrelevant.
The only people, he claims, that ought to attempt shots further out, are those skilled and practiced LR shooters (yes, the paper punchers) who have real, demonstratable skill at longer distance shooting, be that in the field OR on a range since the skill sets are the same for good shots, and also for seasoned varmint hunters who can shoot the eyebrows off a ground squirrel at 400 yards first shot. I don't know too many people that can do that first shot every time.
In summary, perhaps the best advice comes from an American Army Colonel mentioned in the book...."If you can get steadier, GET steadier....if you can get closer GET closer".
There's little to be gained by anyone on tit for tat circular arguments, but I'm sure that both sides can see the sense in perhaps going back to basics a bit and conceding that both the rifle and the shooter's skill, both as a stalker AND a shot both matter equally.