I only hunt on the ground and pick my set up to match the condition, bowhunter traffic, whether I am a lefty or a righty, and how good my warm shots have been. Thinking back, it seems that I have had many more shots that required something different than ones that allowed me to do the perfect backyard or indoor practice shot. It seems there is always a little something that needs to be done to accommodate a shot when still hunting or ground hunting without a blind. I have two things, don't stare at them before shooting, side vision, and when it is time to shoot get on with it and let the situation decide the tempo. For myself, a smooth quicker tempo is almost always better than an exaggerated slow motion tempo, but there have been exceptions where I was caught at partial draws, etc. When I hunted with the same form as my target style and bow sights, I realized that I would have to racially change how I did things no matter how good my target groups were. I had a terrible time getting off shots the way i wanted, especially when small game hunting. So I went back to what I saw what Fred Bear, Ben Pearson and Howard Hill did in the films that I had seen. That was a good season, I shot a Pearson Deadhead through a nice ten pointer on the move with my Bear takedown, when it was near zero out with a ground blizzard sneaking from plum thicket to plum thicket on a hill side late in the morning. Don't think of fluid and varied shooting as sloppy form, ending in a sloppy aim with a sloppy release. With practice a strong sure shot can be taken at a quicker fluid tempo with most any bow at varied positions. It is not such a good thing to have a good stiff form that works on targets nicely and then to pull the fluid fast shot out only for a hoper shot at a deer. I shot a doe up hill from me once while laying on my back. I practiced it many times and at less than twenty yards and in that position I knew that it would work. A guy has to get off his feet occasionally when sneaking around all day, I sometimes think deer hear something and come in to check out what they heard, it seems to happen more often that way when I have been still hunting really slow.