I have to say that I had a complete unexpected turn with the EZV this year.
I shot well with my setup all summer on a 3D deer target. The set up was peepless, bowmar nose button, kisser button and EZV (280 insert for 540gn arrows).
I felt very confident going into the season. The first week I missed 3 deer in 4 shots. One of my arrows hit a small diameter tree that I didn’t see in my sight picture. That one’s on me - we’ll call it early season rust. The 2nd miss later that night was a low light 25 yard shot and I flat out missed.
I lost quite a bit of confidence but I told myself it’s a part of the game and I’ll give the EZ V another shot.
2 days later I was presented with a nearly identical shot from the same set and I missed this doe twice.
I immediately got home and performed brain surgery on my bow. Peep went back in, nose button off, HHA optimizer lite single pin on. Resighted.
This weekend I speed-scouted a new public ground, found a white oak dropping acorns and had probably my most fun hunt ever on probably my smallest deer ever and I double lunged a young doe at 22 yards, text book quartering away placement.
After some analysis on what was going on with the ez v I have determined that since I am cross-eye dominant, I need to close one eye to shoot the EZV. This is a severe handicap in low light conditions for me and I think directly attributable to my misses. It didn’t occur to me over the summer while shooting the sight on 3D targets on sunny summer days. With the single pin I am able to keep both eyes open and I am programmed to rule out the duplicate pin in my sight picture at this point automatically.
Anyway I figured I’d share that anecdote here.