Scopecaming — The Higher the Scope Magnification the Better?
Help me and check if I'm thinking correctly about scope magnification when taking scopecam footage.

I want to record and edit my shots in such a way that the quarry is very large — so large it pretty much fills the frame.

● In order to achive that I need a very large total magnification.
I can achieve that using three methods:
(a) When editing, digitally enlarge the image and crop it.
(b) When filming, increase the digital zoom of the scopecam.
(c) When filming, increase the optical "zoom" of the scope (the scope magnification).
● Methods (a) and (b) make the image more grainy and thus reduce the sharpness of the image a lot.
Method (c) reduces the sharpness only as much as the scope quality goes down when using higher magnification. The top scopes I hear don't loose much sharpness.


Therefore I should:
● (a) Buy a scope with a high top end magnification.
● (b) Buy a scope with high glass quality that maintains excellent sharpness even at high magnifications.



● For c. $500 I can get a Vector Continental 5-30x56. It fulfills (a) as it has a high magnification.
● Or — for c. $500 I can get a Riton X7 Conquer 3-18x50. It fulfills (b) (sharpness) as it is usually sold at three times that price.
There are other contrasting options I could mention.

(Buying both, trying them out, and sending them back is not an option, sorry.)
Friends, for years you've been helping me spend my money, you pack of enablers!!

Now help me spend my money wisely, please.
Matthias
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