I have my own opinions, but I'm wondering what yours are. I think folks have no sense of history, no sense of hunting like the old ones did, and no sense challenge. I think the majority of muzzleloading hunters want in-lins with 209 primers, removable breech plugs, and short barrels. I think the majority of hunters that shoot scoped muzzleloaders are in it for the extra season and that's all.
That said, I see nothing wrong with that. It just is not for me, and maybe not for a few others who come here. I love the challenge of backing up 200 years in time and losing myself in the troubles our forefarthers took for granted. I like the fact that I might not harvest an animal becasuse I failed to position my flint correctly in the jaws of the lock. I like making sure my flash hole is clear. I like to cover my lock during bad weather. I like to know that I've adjused my sights just so, that the silver blade at the front of my barrel is perfectly mated with the rear notch. I like to know that if I drop my rifle, the scope won't become misaligned (because there ain't no scope), and that the animal I kill was not so easy to take. I like to know that I've mastered the longrifle. I like the smell and mess and smoke of real blackpowder. I like to fiddle with my lock in the woods, making sure it's right. I like to lean my longrifle against a tree and step back and look at it. I like to lay it across a dead deer and remember all the challenges I mastered to make the harvest happen, just as real woodsmen did in times past. I like messing with patch thickness, patch materials, ball size, powder charges, and all the stuff that woodsmen of long ago had to get exactly right. I like blanket coats and powder horns and powder measurers made out of antler. I like starting a fire with flint and steel and tinder I gatherd myself. To me, convenience in the wilderness is a dreadful loss and a sadness to the man who thinks he needs it. He does not and probably never will know or understand the joy of what muzzleloading and hunting really was to the people that gave him the liberty to hunt with an in-line.