I prefer the G5 small game broadhead, lol! Yes, I'm a bow hunter. I was traditional only until my fingers started giving me fits. I still take the recurve to stands where I know the yardage will be short...under 20 yards. I can't practice with it as much as I'd like, but since I've started carrying the compound, my longest shot has been 12 yards anyway, so I'm not sure it matters.
Killing stuff isn't all about accuracy (probably not the right word); it's about being willing to. Kind of hard to explain, but I know lots of guys who can out shoot me at targets. Some of them just fall apart when there is a live critter involved. I don't. Once I make the decision that I'm going to kill something, I get very calm and just go about my business. I may get the adrenaline shakes after the fact, but not when it matters. Maybe either I have great control over my adrenal glands, or they are malfunctioning and work late, lol!
The problem I have with crossbows, and to a lesser extent, compound bows, is that they are promoted as THE answer. All you have to do is buy one, and you will magically become a great hunter. Take a few shots, mostly hit the bullseye, and go hunting. To quote the old lady in the commercial, "That's not how this works." I shoot enough that the act of shooting is almost automatic. I don't have to think about all the steps involved because I've done them so many times. I decide this is the animal I want, I pick a spot on the critter, and almost as if by magic an arrow appears in that spot. It's kind of hard to explain.
Oddly enough, practicing with a compound has made be a better shot with my recurve or longbow. I haven't quite figured out why, but I suspect it has slowed my shot sequence, so I'm getting a better anchor.
I better knock off this bow talk on a muzzle loading site, lol. I think the basic concept of hunting is the same for both though. I still like head shots though. If I bark one, it won't be on purpose.