In yesterday's live show, we had a nice discussion of optics and guns that made an impression on us during 2021, but ultimately the Q&A really took over the discussion. The whole 2021 wrap-up ended up a little more disorganized than I like, but the Q&A was quite entertaining and I did not want to mess with that.
In the past month I had a few people ask me to try to isolate my thoughts on what I think the optic of the year is, for me and for the way I use my rifles. In principle all of that information is nicely contained in my detailed recommendations and in the occasional "if I could have only one" discussions. However, I can see how a sane and busy person may not always wade through all of that. This being the last few hours of 2021 in North America, I figured I should simplify my selections into a couple of succinct (by my wordy standards) paragraphs.
My original plan was to have that whole discussion during yesterday's live show, but perhaps this is better.
Here are the simple criteria:
1) It has to be an optic that was introduced during 2021.
2) It has to be something I want to use irrespective of price.
3) It has to be something that changed how I kit out my gear.
4) It can be a riflescope, binocular, spotter or LRF
The results will not surprise you since these are the optics I have been talking about for a good bit.
Here were go.
To the surprise of noone who has been on this website for any length of time 1st Inaugural Dark Lord Optic of the Year is Vortex Razor HD-LHT 4.5-22x50. There is nothing else out there that can do so many things so well while weighing less than 22 ounces. I can use this optic on nearly every scopable rifle I own spanning precision boltguns, hunting rifles and DMR-ish semi-autos and be content. Is it ideal everywhere? No, but is really good for a lot of things. I am really drawn to that. https://bit.ly/3FM6M54
1st Runner Up: March-F Shorty 1-10x24 with DL-TR1 reticle. I have been playing with some version of this scope for a little bit, but received the version with the tree reticle only recently. It is the single most versatile LPVO on the market today with side focus, dual focal plane reticle and compact overall length. It is equally comfortable on nearly every type of a semi-auto with or without a clip-on in front of it. https://shrsl.com/3bpz3
2nd Runner Up: Leica CRF 3500.com 7x24 LRF. I have been so pre-occupied with exploring LRF equipped binoculars that I have been ignoring traditional monocular LRFs and I am sorta thinking it may have been a mistake. Why this Leica? It is an excellent LRF AND an excellent monocular. It is tiny. It fits in my pocket. It gives me a nice 7x monocular to look at distant things. It talks to my Kestrel when I am shooting. https://bit.ly/3Hnee7a
3rd Runner Up: Vortex Razor UHD 10x50 binocular. It is a really excellent binocular for the money, but there are many excellent binoculars out there. Why this one? Because it is making me eat crow. For years I advocated the use of lower power 8x42 binos for general purpose glassing, arguing that 10x are less steady offhand. That is still correct, but these Abbe-Koenig binos, are a little heavier, a little longer and have slightly larger exit pupil than the ubiquitous 10x42 Schmidt-Pechan designs. The combination of these qualities made them that much more forgiving to use offhand and really superb off of a tripod. https://bit.ly/3FFJI86
4th Runner Up: Burris BTC50 thermal clip-on. For what it costs, it kicks ass. The ability to run on CR123 batteries or off of external power. Back biased mount for use on short handguards and surprisingly good image quality for around $3k made me want to dig into the consumer thermal market in more detail and I plan to do exactly that in 2022. https://bit.ly/3EIQnx5
Now that this is getting published, I am going to prepare myself for the slew of hate mail and a slew of cancelled SHOT Show appointments...