Well, people talk about snipers and hunters, like they are separate, but really it's just a matter of what you are hunting. For example, snipers in the field, in just about every 1st rate army in the world have adopted the ghillie suit, a product of game wardens in the UK. During wartime armies love to recruit hunters and target shooters for sniper roles. Snipers are in many ways the ultimate hunters, since their game is both self aware and usually armed in a way that a bear or lion could never be.
Nowadays I'm very much a minimalist and my only centerfire rifle is a scoped .243 Win barrel for my H&R Handi-Rifle. It's a single shot with a very strong ejector, and it gets done what I need done. It takes down rapidly and the rifle barrel and the shotgun barrels I have for it all stow very compactly and out of the way, as does my folding long bow.
Since that is my primary hunting firearm these days, and I live in a saltwater environment where things rust rapidly and badly, I'm looking into getting the receiver, all of it's parts, and the barrels treated with titanium nitride, and then have the receiver and the outside of the barrels treated with cerakote. I might have the .243 barrel cryo-treated first before anything else. I can get all of that done right here in Texas.
Back in Arizona, where I lived for a while, setting up a 1000 yard range was easy. You just picked some public land, and there was a LOT of it, preferably with some hill or mountain as a back drop, and there was a lot of those also. You drove out and set up your target.
The USA has a lot of really open land, especially in the deserts. For example, I lived in the desert for quite a while as a kid and while still very young my dad taught me how to shoot clays in the air with a rifle. That isn't something you can do safely many other places. When you grow up shooting across canyons and in high winds, you get some good experience.