The Perazzi MR57: First American Look at the New Italian Olympian

With the new Perazzi MR57, the Italian shotgun maker, which holds 62 Olympic medals, has taken an audacious leap into redefining the competition over/under as a work of art that turns clay targets into fairy dust.

Perazzi has always believed that even the most successful platforms must continue to evolve alongside the sport. As shooting disciplines progress and target presentations become increasingly complex – particularly in sporting clays – the demands placed on both shooter and shotgun continue to change. The MR57 was designed with this evolution in mind.

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10 Budget Sporters That Will Keep You in the Action for 2026

The prices of sporting guns have risen sharply over the past few years, most recently driven by a mix of higher manufacturing costs, supply chain disruptions and a wave of tariffs. 

For wing and clays shooters, the impact is already impossible to ignore. What were once  relatively accessible sports are now under financial pressure for both newcomers and longtime participants – even putting some of our cherished American traditions at risk for future generations.

For 2026 in particular, the whiplash originates from tariffs on raw materials used to manufacture sporting guns, components and ammunition; increased oil prices that impact manufacturing and transportation; and inventories being prioritized for conflicts worldwide. For the weekend clay shooter or upland hunter these market dynamics translate into a direct hit on our wallet. And at the bottom of the food chain (the cash register of your local firearms dealer), tariffs alone on the finished product can add anywhere from 10 to 30 percent on the retail price of an over/under, side by side, pump  or semi-auto made in Italy, Germany, the UK, Turkey or Japan.

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Taking Stock: Confessions of a Custom-Fit Convert

I had always been a little dismissive of the idea of a custom stock. I say this at the risk of confirming my ignorance, but hear me out: I already had an adjustable stock on my Krieghoff K-80, and I preferred it without any adjustments. Therefore, that contraption was of limited value to me. My LOP (Length of Pull) is 14.5” – which is fairly common. Cast was something to adjust to rather than worry about. Heck, if I had one custom stock made and shot it really well, that would be a slippery slope; I would need to have custom stocks made for all my guns. This is already an expensive hobby, so I thought it better to learn to shoot the gun as it was rather than custom-fitting the stock to me, and perhaps at one point in my shooting development that was not terrible thinking. I was not yet disciplined enough in my mount for a custom fit to make sense.

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Longthorne’s Woodward-Inspired Foxcote Gets More Firepower

First introduced by Longthorne Guns in 28 gauge, the Foxcote over/under pays tribute to Foxcote House, an 18th-century country estate in the village of Ilmington, England noted for the owner’s shooting parties dropping in by helicopter.

Now, the English gunmaker has upped the Foxcote’s firepower by adding a 12 gauge – certainly more apropos of us mere mortals for downing the plump high-flying pheasants of that lovely country manor. The 12 gauge continues the design and shooting principles of the growing Foxcote family.

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