Ruger has a long history of building rugged, reliable firearms that blend traditional craftsmanship with practical innovation. From the timeless M77 series to today’s precision-oriented rifles, Ruger delivers tools hunters and marksmen can depend on in the field. When they teamed with FTW Ranch in Texas, home to the SAAM shooting and hunting courses, to create a purpose-built rifle, I took notice.
FTW Ranch is known for world-class instruction and terrain that tests both shooter and equipment. A rifle developed alongside instructors who teach in that terrain made perfect sense. The result is the Ruger Hawkeye FTW Hunter, a rifle born in the hills and canyons where it will actually be used. Chambered in .308 Winchester, it promises reliability, accuracy, and versatility for hunters who need more than a name on the barrel.

I’ve attended several courses at FTW Ranch. The drive up the dusty road, the long view of the Hill Country, and the instructors’ focus on real-world application left an impression. Many of those instructors have military or dangerous-game backgrounds, and their training emphasizes practical performance under pressure.
When Ruger announced the FTW collaboration, I wanted to see whether the rifle lived up to the FTW name. When the Hawkeye FTW Hunter in .308 Win arrived for review, my first impression matched what I hoped for. This rifle looks like a tool built for hard use. It balances well in the hands, and the finish gives a sense of quiet confidence rather than flash.

The Hawkeye FTW Hunter is based on Ruger’s M77 controlled-round-feed action, a system trusted by hunters and guides for decades. It uses a non-rotating Mauser-type extractor for positive feeding and a fixed-blade ejector for sure case ejection. Those are details that matter when reliability is non-negotiable.
The .308 Winchester chambering balances recoil, range, and ammunition availability. Ruger fits a 22-inch cold hammer-forged stainless steel barrel for durability and consistent accuracy. A 20 MOA Picatinny rail is secured with four #8-40 screws for rock-solid optic mounting and extra elevation for long-range work.
The stock is an H-S Precision Pro-Series synthetic with a full-length aluminum bedding block. FTW instructors helped shape the stock geometry, resulting in a slimmer pistol grip for better control in field positions and a comfortable cheek weld for varied shooting angles. The tan and black speckle finish stands up to brush, mud, and dust; conditions anyone who hunts in Texas Hill Country or western backcountry will recognize.

Other features include Ruger’s LC6 trigger, which breaks cleanly with minimal creep, and a three-position safety that allows the shooter to lock the bolt or unload safely with the safety engaged. The internal magazine holds four rounds and uses a hinged floorplate for quick unloading. Overall weight comes in just under 8 pounds, making the rifle stable to shoot while still practical to carry.
Taking the Hawkeye FTW Hunter to the range and running realistic field drills reinforced why FTW’s influence matters. The rifle performed in the same scenarios FTW trains for: steep-angle shots, kneeling positions, and quick transitions from supported to unsupported shooting.
The LC6 trigger is crisp and predictable, which makes precision straightforward. The stock geometry encourages a natural shooting position, whether prone or standing. The rifle’s balance helps it settle naturally onto targets, and recoil from the .308 Win is mild enough for quick follow-up shots.
Accuracy impressed. With quality factory ammunition I saw consistent groups around 1 MOA at 100 yards, and handloads tuned for the barrel tightened groups further. The combination of cold hammer-forged barrel, rigid bedding, and predictable trigger gives the Hawkeye FTW Hunter precision that rivals many higher-priced rifles.
More importantly, the rifle inspires confidence. Whether running drills on FTW’s long-range course or shooting from uneven terrain, it simply worked. The controlled-round-feed action cycled smoothly, feeding cleanly even when worked fast or at odd angles. The stainless steel components shrugged off dust and light rain without issue.
This is not a featherweight mountain rifle, but it feels purpose-built for the kind of hunting many of us do: spot-and-stalk deer, hogs, or western game where shots vary from 50 to 400 yards. It is dependable, the sort of rifle you can take anywhere and trust to perform.
The Ruger Hawkeye FTW Hunter is more than a special edition with a logo. It represents a real collaboration between a respected rifle maker and a premier shooting school. Every feature reflects practical experience from instructors who train thousands of hunters, and it is built by a company that understands reliability.
If you value real-world functionality, durability, and accuracy, the Hawkeye FTW Hunter deserves a hard look. It is ideal for anyone who has attended or plans to attend a SAAM or FTW Ranch course, and it is equally at home in the deer woods of Michigan, the elk mountains of Colorado, or the brush country of Texas.
To learn more and check available calibers and dealer inventory, see Ruger’s official site for full specifications.
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