KISS. You've killed a lion's share of big bucks. Let me ask you how many times you had time to breathe, settle the pin, and repeat some calming mantra in your head while slowly squeezing your shoulder blades for a surprise release?
If your experience is anything like mine then you are usually contorted, twisted, bent over, stretched, kneeling, scrunched up, or some combination. You get one very brief shot opportunity and you either lift, draw, and release in one fluid motion or else you draw & hold an indefinite amount of time waiting for just the right window. Actual hunting is absolutely nothing like range shooting. Groups don't matter. Robin Hood accuracy doesn't matter. One shot. No warm up. No do over.
IMO your equipment and practice should match your objective. If your objective is competing on the range then by all means equip yourself accordingly and practice for a competition of accuracy on a range. You'll want all the stabilization because fractions of an inch make all the difference. BUT if you're objective is hunting then equip yourself & practice for what you're actually going to experience on the hunt. Not only does all the extra accessory stuff not help but it very plausibly can be a hindrance.