I have a Sako Classic AV in 7MM Rem Mag with a 4x12 Leupold Vari-X II. It will shoot ragged one-hole groups all day long. I've killed a mule deer buck at a long way...a real long way away. .284 caliber bullets are legendary for traveling a long way and penetrating very deeply. In an older Nosler manual I have, the 175 Partition has the highest BC of all Nosler bullets.
I will take my 7MM Rem Mag on an elk hunt this year. While I'll primarily use my .270 Win with 150 grain Partitions because it's 2 pounds lighter, should longer shots be be on the hunting agenda, I'll use my 7MM Rem Mag with 160 Partitions that I've chrono'd at just over 3100 FPS. Depending upon the source, it's as much as 3 grains under maximum. They're loaded with H-4831.
When I began hunting, an old timer in our party used a 7X57 for mule deer. He also had an 8X57 that he used for larger game. My dad began big game hunting in the 30's. He told me that the then .300 was the .300 Savage. He used a Model 81 in .35 Rem. He used it in Eastern Canada with success. He even killed mule deer in Utah with it.
To my way of looking at killing big game, biology is always controlling. Nothing lives more than seconds sans its heart and/or lungs. As long as I'm able to stop oxygenated blood flow to a bull's brain, it will die. If I put a .270 Win bullet or a 7MM Rem Mag bullet where it needs to be, my guide and I will be in for a whole lot of work. If I don't put a bullet where it needs to be, after the hard work is done my guide will probably make me walk back to camp without lunch.
I wonder how many elk, moose, and bear our northern neighbors killed with surplus .303 British rifles.