Asking hunters about optics is really not the best place for good info. Look for reviews and comparisons by birders, they are much more knowledgeable and less biased on optics. Hunters simply tell you to buy what they have and rarely have done any legitimate comparisons, and many are influenced by sponsors. There are subtle differences in things like eye cups that are important, other not so subtle things like prism type are very important and most hunters can't even tell you what kind of prisms their binos have. That's why I say asking hunters about optics is like asking teenage boys about sex, they kinda get it. Ask the same questions to birders and they will tell you all about the prisms, CA, edge distortion, color warmness, feel, clarity, eye cups, manufacturer, etc...
On prisms the Schmidt Pechan is smaller and most popular but does not transmit as much light. The Abbe Koenig is larger and heavier but transmits more light, these are models like Leupold BX-5, Sig Sauer Zulu 9, and MAven B2. Make sure you can hold the binos stable enough to free hand, for me the most I can handle is 10x, beyond that I shake too much. More magnification is not always better, you give up FOV which is another thing you will rarely ever see hunters mention in bino discussions. Another funny thing is many of the binoculars hunters buy are not even made by the company with the name on the box, there are are a handfull of large MFG's who make binos for many manufacturers, birders will discuss who actually made the binos and I have yet to see hunters even acknowledge any of these manufacturers
For the most part hunters will tell you to buy Leupold, Vortex, or Swaro. There are lot of other brands of optics out there that hunters are not even aware of such as pentax, fujinon, steiner, tract, takahashi, minox, etc. In fact if you look at some of those brands lenses for cameras they are much more expensive than even the Swaro optics hunters use and think are the best ever.