This all came up almost 20 years ago with Fred when I still lived near his shop and ran around with him, and was all about getting the best precision (accuracy) possible from Contender carbine barrels chambered for several factory and long range wildcat cartridges he was going to build for me. That was long before the Encore came out, although I didn't leave his area until soon after getting one of the first available Encore frames from him to shoot the 416 Rigby (he bought 80 "E" frames when they were first released). All of my Encores were pistols. I'd guess it generally applies to both frames though as both have long lock times, making harmonics more critical than velocity for precision IMO. The heavier weight of the Encore and being the 375JDJ may change it a little though. Most of the carbine barrels I had built by Fred were 17-26 caliber wildcats for long range P&V hunting.
You can always lop off some and try it, and if you still want it shorter lop it off again. Personally, if I was going to hunt in thick cover often or climb a lot of mountains when hunting, I'd make it short, easy to swing and carry - not worry about some velocity/energy loss even out to fairly long range. Unless you're only shooting longer ranges, it won't make enough difference to worry about when the bullet makes meat. If push comes to shove on bigger game, you can always make up some of the loss by going to heavier bullets too.
IME-YMMV