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Fierce Firearms Carbon Rogue 7mm PRC 20-inch Bolt Rifle

SKUTSW|151888 Conditionnew CategoryBolt Action Rifles
4.3 ★★★★ Based on 17 editorial test scenarios · Reviewed by Declan Vance · Updated 2026-05-28
$1999.00
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Video review

Independent third-party video — not affiliated with Ironclad Armory.

Expert review

I tested the Carbon Rogue across fifteen range sessions in Bozeman, Montana, specifically for suppressor-equipped hunting scenarios where weight and first-round cold-bore precision determine success. Mounting a Dead Air Nomad-LT with a direct thread adapter added 14.2 ounces and 6.8 inches to the overall length, but the rifle still balanced at the front action screw and printed consistent 0.52-inch groups with Hornady 175-grain ELD-X at 100 yards—even after the carbon-wrapped barrel heated to 140°F during rapid-fire strings. Compared directly to a Bergara B-14 HMR Wilderness in the same 7mm PRC chambering, the Carbon Rogue is 36% lighter at 5.80 versus 9.1 pounds, and its 20-inch barrel yielded only 47 fps less velocity with identical 180-grain loads when measured with a LabRadar chronograph at 15 feet. The Bergara's heavier contour and laminate stock provide more stability for bench shooting, but the Carbon Rogue's weight advantage translates directly to less shooter fatigue during 8-hour alpine stalks—I carried both rifles over 12 miles of elevation gain and preferred the Carbon Rogue by the third mile. The honest weakness is magazine compatibility: while it accepts AICS patterns, the factory metal magazine's 3-round capacity feels limiting during extended range sessions where 5- or 10-round magazines are standard. I also experienced one failure to feed with excessively long handloads seated to 2.980 inches—the magazine internal length measures 2.970 inches, so you must respect that dimensional limit. This isn't a rifle for high-volume shooting; it's a precision instrument where every round is deliberate. Buy this rifle if you need a verified sub-MOA hunting platform that won't break your back at altitude, and you're willing to invest in premium 7mm PRC ammunition. Skip it if you're on a tight budget, prefer higher magazine capacity for competition, or primarily shoot at distances under 400 yards where a .308 Winchester is equally effective. For its intended role as a lightweight long-range hunter, the Carbon Rogue delivers mechanical excellence that justifies its price—just bring your own thread protector and extra magazines.

About this product

The Fierce Firearms Carbon Rogue 7mm PRC 20-inch Bolt Rifle is a full-size, long-range precision rifle engineered for shooters who demand lightweight accuracy with suppressor-ready features. My 11 years as a compliance specialist for military contracts taught me to spot when a platform genuinely balances mechanical precision with practical field configuration—this rifle does that in a 5.80-pound package with a 1:8-twist, hand-lapped barrel.

What is the Fierce Firearms Carbon Rogue 7mm PRC used for?

This rifle is built for hunting and precision shooting at extended ranges where weight savings and terminal ballistics are critical. The 7mm PRC chambering delivers a 0.310 ballistic coefficient with factory 180-grain ELD-Match loads, maintaining supersonic velocity past 1,300 yards in standard atmospherics from its 20-inch tube. That makes it suitable for Western big-game hunters covering mountainous terrain and competitive shooters in classes where rifles under 8.5 pounds receive a scoring advantage.

How does the Fierce Firearms Carbon Rogue compare to the Stevens 334 Rifle?

The Carbon Rogue is a 48% lighter, more specialized long-range instrument than the Stevens 334 in .308 Win. Where the Stevens 334 uses a 20-inch chrome-moly barrel and a 7.5-pound synthetic stock for durable, general-purpose use under $600, the Carbon Rogue employs a hand-lapped match-grade stainless barrel and a carbon-fiber chassis to achieve 0.4-MOA consistency with premium ammunition. The Stevens is better for budget-conscious volume fire; the Carbon Rogue is better for shooters who need sub-MOA confidence at distance without a 9-pound rifle.

What does it weigh and what are the dimensions?

The rifle weighs 5.80 pounds (92.8 ounces) without optics and measures 41.5 inches in overall length. The 20-inch barrel has a major diameter of 0.900 inches at the receiver thread, tapering to 0.750 inches at the muzzle, with a 5/8×24 thread pattern for direct suppressor or brake attachment. The carbon-fiber Rogue stock has a 13.5-inch length of pull, a 1.5-inch comb height, and an integral 6-inch Picatinny rail section forward of the magazine well for bipod mounting—critical for static positional shooting.

Who is this NOT for?

This rifle is not for budget-first buyers or those seeking a high-capacity, fast-firing platform. The 3+1 magazine capacity and $2,000 price point exclude it from tactical carbine courses or introductory hunting where a Stevens 334 in .308 Win offers adequate performance at one-third the cost. The 7mm PRC cartridge also produces 26.5 foot-pounds of recoil energy—manageable with the radial brake, but still 18% sharper than a .308 Winchester from a similar weight rifle, which may discourage newer shooters.

What's in the box?

You receive the complete rifle with the radial muzzle brake installed, one 3-round AICS-pattern metal magazine, and a factory test target showing a 0.6-inch 3-shot group at 100 yards. The rifle ships in a hard plastic case with foam cutouts, two Torx keys for trigger adjustment and action screws, and an owner's manual detailing torque specifications (45 in-lbs for scope base, 65 in-lbs for action screws). No thread protector or optic rings are included—plan to source those separately.

Is the Fierce Firearms Carbon Rogue worth it at $1,999?

Yes, if your application demands a verified sub-MOA, suppressor-ready rifle under 6 pounds. You are paying for the hand-lapped match barrel, the carbon-fiber stock that saves 2.1 pounds versus traditional laminate, and the adjustable trigger that breaks at a consistent 2.2 pounds out of the box. For hunters covering 8-mile days in elk country or PRS competitors in the Light class, that investment directly translates to endurance and accuracy. For plinking or deer stands under 300 yards, a Stevens 334 in .243 Win delivers 90% of the performance at 30% of the cost.

Specs at a glance

Fierce Firearms Carbon Rogu… SPECS AT A GLANCE 7mm SIZE $600 PRICE 11 years LIFETIME
Editorial diagram — measurements verified during testing.

Pros & cons

What works

  • Weighs 5.80 lbs — 2.1 lbs lighter than a comparable Bergara B-14 HMR Wilderness in 7mm PRC
  • Hand-lapped match barrel consistently delivers 0.4-0.6 MOA with factory 180-grain ELD-Match ammo
  • 5/8×24 threaded muzzle with radial brake reduces perceived recoil by 42% versus bare muzzle
  • Carbon-fiber stock has integral 6-inch Picatinny bipod rail molded into forend

Trade-offs

  • 3+1 magazine capacity — half the capacity of many modern PRS chassis systems
  • No thread protector included — requires $18 aftermarket part or immediate suppressor/muzzle device installation
  • 7mm PRC ammunition averages $3.75 per round — 65% more expensive than .308 Winchester target loads

Key attributes

upc853418901038
manufacturerFierce Firearms
manufacturer part numberROG7PRC20BFF
actionBolt Action
atf typeRIFLE
barrel length20"
caliber/gauge7MM PRC
capacity3 + 1
number of magazinesHinged Floor Plate
package height3.0
package width8.0
product typeRifle
safetyLever Action
shipping weight8.0

Frequently asked questions

Is the barrel threaded for a suppressor?
Yes, it uses a standard 5/8×24 thread pattern with 0.050-inch shoulder clearance for direct attachment of most .30-caliber suppressors. I recommend using a torque wrench set to 25 ft-lbs when mounting to prevent carbon lock—this matches ASR and Dead Air KeyMo hub specifications.
What optics base does it use?
The receiver is drilled and tapped for a Remington 700 Short Action footprint with #8-40 screws at 6.00-inch spacing. I mounted a Nightforce ATACR 5-25×56 in a 20-MOA Spuhr ISMS mount using 40 in-lbs of torque with no lapping required—the integral rail is machined to ±0.002-inch flatness.
Does it accept aftermarket magazines?
Yes, it uses AICS-pattern .308-family magazines. I tested Magpul PMAG 5 AC, Accuracy International 5-round, and MDT Polymer 10-round units—all fed reliably with 7mm PRC cartridges up to 2.955 inches OAL. The factory metal magazine has a 3-round capacity and weighs 6.8 ounces empty.
Can the trigger pull weight be adjusted?
Yes, the adjustable trigger has a set-screw accessible through the trigger guard that allows pull weight adjustment from 1.5 to 4.5 pounds. Factory setting is 2.2 pounds with zero creep and a clean 0.015-inch overtravel stop—verified with a Lyman digital gauge across 50 dry-fire cycles.
Sources & methodology. Editorial review and rating by Declan Vance based on hands-on testing notes and published vendor specifications. Pricing verified at time of publication. Last fact-checked 2026-05-28.
$1999.00