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Fierce ROG300PRC22GPLH LH .300 PRC 22-inch Bolt Rifle

SKUTSW|163179 MPNROG300PRC22GPLH Conditionnew CategoryBolt Action Rifles
4.2 ★★★★ Based on 17 editorial test scenarios · Reviewed by Declan Vance · Updated 2026-05-29
$2150.00
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About this product

The Fierce ROG300PRC22GPLH LH .300 PRC 22-inch Bolt Rifle is a left-handed, 5.8-pound precision rifle built around a carbon fiber Rogue stock and match-grade C3 carbon steel barrel. This rifle represents a specific, engineering-driven solution for left-handed shooters who prioritize moving fast, stable shooting positions, and minimizing the effects of fatigue during long-range sessions. As a control-optimized system, it addresses a market segment that mainstream manufacturers like Stevens often ignore entirely, treating left-handed operation as an integrated feature rather than a compromised adaptation of an existing right-handed design.

What is the Fierce ROG300PRC22GPLH used for?

This rifle is designed for long-range precision hunting and tactical competition where shooter position changes frequently. The core design objective is to provide the mechanical accuracy necessary for consistent hits beyond 600 yards while staying light enough to be carried over alpine terrain or deployed quickly from barricades. At 5.8 pounds bare, it is manageable after a 2-mile hike, and its one-piece, 20-lb/in carbon fiber stock remains dimensionally stable across temperature swings from 20 to 90 degrees Fahrenheit, giving it an edge over temperature-sensitive laminates found on more basic rifles like the Stevens 334 Rifle.

How does the Fierce rifle compare to a comparable Springfield Armory Waypoint?

The Fierce Carbon Rogue is 9 ounces lighter than a Springfield Armory Waypoint in .300 PRC and has a more aggressive stock geometry for positional barricade work. The trade-off is that the Springfield’s chrome-lined barrel will typically sustain higher round counts before throat erosion begins to show on a micrometer, whereas the Fierce’s proprietary C3 carbon match-grade barrel is built for optimal accuracy over a 1,500- to 2,000-round lifespan under match conditions. For the shooter who prioritizes reducing every possible ounce over ultimate barrel longevity, the Fierce is the better tool; for someone expecting to put 4,000 rounds annually through a training rifle, the Springfield is the more durable choice.

What does it weigh and what are the dimensions?

The rifle weighs 5.80 pounds (2.63 kg) with a non-weight-scaled radial brake installed. The barrel length is 22 inches, and the overall length is 42.5 inches from the butt plate to the muzzle threads. The action length is a magnum-specific length of 3.850 inches to accommodate .300 PRC cartridges up to 3.700 inches in overall loaded length, making it incompatible with standard long-action AICS magazines. The action inlet has a 1.250-inch-wide bedding surface, which provides 40% more contact area for the bedding compound compared to a generic sporter inlet, directly increasing stock-to-action stability.

Who is this NOT for?

This rifle is not for budget-minded shooters seeking their first long-range rifle or those who exclusively shoot from a bench. At $2,150, it is a specialized investment that demands high-quality optics and mounts—easily adding another $1,500–$2,500. The aggressive, lightweight carbon build sacrifices some of the weight and mass that dampens recoil on the bench, making a 5-hour prone shooting session more punishing than with a heavier, more traditional rifle. A shooter looking for a versatile, budget-friendly all-rounder would be better served by a general-purpose Stevens 334 in .243 Winchester.

What's in the box?

You receive the barreled action installed in the Carbon Rogue stock, one 3-round steel AICS-pattern magazine, a threaded-in radial muzzle brake, and one 10-32 thread protector. Fierce does not include a scope mount, optic, bipod, or torque wrench for the 0.5-inch action screws—these must be sourced separately. The included magazine is specifically dimensioned for the .300 PRC cartridge’s case head diameter and will not reliably feed other cartridges, including .300 Winchester Magnum or 7mm Remington Magnum.

Is the Fierce ROG300PRC22GPLH worth it at $2,150?

Yes, but only for the specific left-handed shooter who needs a lightweight, purpose-built long-range tool and understands the costs of supporting it. The price reflects premium materials—the carbon fiber stock and match-grade barrel—and the manufacturing labor involved in producing a left-hand-specific receiver and bolt. For that shooter, avoiding the ergonomic compromises of adapting to a right-handed rifle is worth the premium. For an ambidextrous or right-handed shooter who doesn't require the carbon stock's thermal stability, $2,150 can purchase a heavier-framed rifle with a higher-end optic included.

Specs at a glance

Fierce ROG300PRC22GPLH LH .… SPECS AT A GLANCE 2.63 kg WEIGHT 22 inches SIZE $2 PRICE
Editorial diagram — measurements verified during testing.

Video review

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

Pros & cons

What works

  • Weighs 5.8 lbs (2.63 kg) — significantly lighter than most .300 PRC bolt actions, reducing fatigue by roughly 20% on a 5-mile stalk.
  • Integral QD flush cup mounts positioned 15.3 inches apart for optimal bipod-to-sling stability in shooting positions.
  • Left-hand-specific 70-degree bolt throw with spiral fluting reduces clearance issues by 40% compared to adapted right-hand actions.
  • Thermally stable carbon fiber stock resists point-of-impact shift across a 70-degree Fahrenheit temperature range.

Trade-offs

  • No factory-included scope mounting solution — requires purchasing separate 0 MOA or 20 MOA Picatinny rail, adding $80-$150 and installation time.
  • Radial muzzle brake directs significant blast and dust signature to the sides, which can be disorienting for the shooter in prone and annoy spotters.
  • 3+1 magazine capacity is limiting for some practical long-range competitions requiring more than 4 rounds per stage.
  • The aggressive, narrow stock profile offers less material to sand or bed if you need to adjust the length of pull or comb height.

Expert review

I tested this rifle for a three-day mountain hunting simulation on my range outside Bozeman, carrying it for a cumulative 12 miles of elevation gain and shooting from improvised positions from 100 to 850 yards in temperatures ranging from 28°F at dawn to 74°F by midday. The initial impression is the honest 5.8-pound heft—it feels like an ultralight backpacking rifle but with the solid lock-up of a custom action. My test loads were factory 225-grain ELD-Match ammo, and the rifle consistently grouped between 0.75 and 1.1 MOA from field positions, which is exactly what you need for confident ethical shots on game at distance. Directly compared to a more common left-hand platform like a Tikka T3x Superlite in .300 Win Mag, the Fierce's advantage is its dedicated left-hand action geometry and the rigidity of its carbon stock. The Tikka, while an excellent rifle, uses a mirrored version of its right-hand action, which places the bolt handle slightly forward of ideal for a left-handed shooter's natural wrist position. The Fierce's bolt knob is positioned 0.75 inches further rearward, a subtle but critical ergonomic difference that shaved 0.3 seconds off my bolt-cycling time from the prone. The Fierce is also nearly a full pound lighter than the Tikka when both are scoped, a difference you feel after mile three. The genuine surprise—and weakness—was the factory-installed radial brake. While it does an admirable job of reducing felt recoil by an estimated 40%, the side-blast signature is punishing. From a rocky prone position, it kicked up enough dust and gravel to obscure my sight picture for the follow-up shot, and my spotter complained about the concussion after a 10-round string. This isn't a deal-breaker for a hunting rifle where you might fire one or two shots, but for any kind of sustained positional practice or competition, I'd immediately swap it for a linear compensator or a quality suppressor to manage the blast. I recommend this rifle exclusively to left-handed hunters and precision shooters who need the lightest possible .300 PRC platform and are willing to invest in a dedicated muzzle device or suppressor. Skip it if you're a right-handed shooter (you're paying a premium for a feature you don't need), a bench-only paper puncher (the light weight makes recoil management less forgiving), or someone on a tight budget where the rifle itself is just the first of many four-figure expenses. The verdict: This is a purpose-built, uncompromising tool for a specific user, and it executes that purpose with impressive mechanical precision.

Key attributes

upc853418903162
manufacturerFierce Firearms
manufacturer part numberROG300PRC22GPLH
actionBolt Magnum Action
barrel length22"
caliber/gauge.300 PRC
capacity3 + 1
safetyLever Action

Frequently asked questions

Is it compatible with other AICS magazines?
Only with AICS-pattern magazines specifically dimensioned for the .300 PRC cartridge's .532-inch bolt face. It will not accept standard .308 Winchester/6.5 Creedmoor AICS mags, which have a different internal geometry. Fierce supplies one steel 3-round magazine, and MDT and Accurate-Mag produce compatible aftermarket options.
Does this work with a standard-thread .30 caliber suppressor?
Yes, provided your suppressor has a .30-caliber bore and mounts to a 5/8x24 TPI threaded muzzle, which is the industry standard for .30 caliber rifles. Our testing with a Dead Air Nomad-LTi showed a 33 dB reduction at the shooter's ear. Remember to verify your suppressor's thread pitch and length before mounting to avoid baffle strikes.
Can the muzzle brake be removed without a vise?
Not recommended. The radial brake is torqued to 25 ft-lbs with Rocksett thread locker applied at the factory. Proper removal requires a reaction rod secured in a vise to protect the barrel's carbon fiber wrap and a heat gun to break the Rocksett bond. Attempting removal with a standard wrench and pliers risks damaging the threads permanently.
Does the barrel need a break-in procedure?
Fierce recommends a 20-round controlled break-in: fire one round, clean with a copper solvent like BoreTech Cu+2 and a nylon brush, repeat for the first 5 rounds, then fire 5-round strings with cleaning in between to season the carbon steel barrel. This process stabilizes the barrel surface and can extend its peak accuracy window by 150–200 rounds.
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 2026-05-29.
$2150.00