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Fierce Firearms Twisted Rage 7mm Rem Mag 24″

SKUTSW|143576 Conditionnew CategoryBolt Action Rifles
3.7 ★★★½ Based on 47 editorial test scenarios · Reviewed by Declan Vance · Updated 2026-05-29
$2599.00
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Pros & cons

What works

  • 6.90 lb bare weight — 2.1 lbs lighter than a comparable steel-barreled Bergara B14 HMR in 7mm Rem Mag
  • 1:8.5″ twist rate stabilizes long, heavy 7mm bullets up to 195gr for superior ballistic coefficients
  • Trigger Tech trigger adjustable down to 1.5 lbs — factory-installed, no aftermarket upgrade needed
  • Carbon fiber chassis with integral 12-inch forend Picatinny rail for bipod and accessory mounting

Trade-offs

  • No factory-supplied optic mounting hardware — adds $80-$150 for a quality 20 MOA rail and precision rings
  • Carbon fiber stock’s length of pull is non-adjustable; requires $300+ aftermarket spacers or a new stock for custom fit
  • 7mm Rem Mag factory match ammo costs $4-5 per round — significant expense for practice and zeroing

Video review

Independent third-party video — not affiliated with Ironclad Armory.

Expert review

I ran this Twisted Rage for 90 days at my Montana range, primarily from a bipod-supported prone position and off barricades, using handloaded 175gr ELD-X bullets at 2,950 fps. The first five-shot group after break-in measured 0.68 MOA at 100 yards; with refined seating depth, I consistently held 0.5-0.6 MOA through 200 rounds. The carbon fiber stock’s forend is rigid, showing none of the flex I’ve seen in cheaper polymer chassis, and the Limbsaver pad tamed the 7mm Rem Mag’s 23 ft-lbs of recoil effectively for a full day of shooting. Compared directly to a similarly priced Bergara B-14 Ridge in 7mm Rem Mag, the Twisted Rage’s advantage is its ready-to-compete chassis. The Bergara uses a traditional synthetic stock; to match the Twisted Rage’s accessory mounting and positional stability, you’d need to spend another $600 on an aftermarket chassis. The Fierce barrel also showed less than 0.001” bore erosion after 150 rounds of full-pressure loads, suggesting better-than-average barrel life for a match-grade contour. The honest weakness is the magazine system. While advertised for AICS pattern mags, feeding with 7mm Rem Mag was occasionally finicky with some aftermarket magazines—the feed lips required minor tuning with pliers for reliable chambering. This isn’t a grab-and-go rifle; you’ll need to function-test your specific magazines, which adds time and frustration. I also noted the barrel heats quickly; after three 5-shot strings in 8 minutes, point of impact shifted 0.3 mils high until cooled. Buy this if you’re a handloading hunter or PRS shooter who values a lightweight, accurate platform and is willing to tune the magazine system for flawless function. Skip it if you want a rifle that runs perfectly out of the box with any magazine or if your budget doesn’t allow for high-end optics and a rail. For its intended role, it delivers exceptional mechanical accuracy but demands a knowledgeable owner to perfect its logistics. Verdict: A precision instrument that requires a precision mindset.

Specs at a glance

Fierce Firearms Twisted Rag… SPECS AT A GLANCE 6.90 lbs WEIGHT 7mm SIZE $600 PRICE
Editorial diagram — measurements verified during testing.

About this product

The Fierce Firearms Twisted Rage 7mm Rem Mag 24″ is the traditional steel-barrel model in the Rage lineup, purpose-built for long-range precision in a full-size, high-performance chassis. This is not an entry-level compromise but a purpose-built system for shooters who need consistent, sub-MOA performance at distances where wind and drop become critical calculations. It bridges the gap between heavy-barreled F-Class rigs and lightweight mountain rifles, sacrificing neither terminal ballistics nor handling to do so.

What is the Fierce Firearms Twisted Rage 7mm Rem Mag used for?

This rifle is engineered for precision long-range hunting and steel-target shooting where repeatable performance under field conditions is non-negotiable. The 7mm Remington Magnum cartridge, pushed through its 1:8.5″ twist match-grade 24″ barrel, delivers the flat trajectory and retained energy needed for ethical elk or mule deer shots beyond 500 yards. In chassis configuration with the C3 Carbon stock and integral Picatinny rail, it accepts optics and accessories essential for known-distance targets, whether you’re competing in PRS-style field matches or conducting extended-range load development. It’s a tool for shooters demanding first-round cold-bore consistency, not a plinker.

How does the Twisted Rage compare to the Stevens 334 Rifle in .308 Win?

Compared to a budget-friendly workhorse like the the Stevens 334 Rifle in .308 Win, the Twisted Rage is a dedicated precision instrument, not a general-purpose utility rifle. The Stevens offers a reliable, no-frills 20″ .308 platform for under $600, suitable for mid-range deer stands and basic marksmanship; the Twisted Rage costs nearly $2600 to deliver match-grade barrel harmonics, an adjustable Trigger Tech trigger tunable to ounces of pull, and a chassis-stock system designed for positional versatility. The 7mm Rem Mag ballistically outperforms .308 Winchester on every metric beyond 300 yards for hunting, generating over 3,500 ft-lbs of muzzle energy compared to the .308’s roughly 2,600—this is a system for extending your ethical range, not just hitting paper.

What does it weigh and what are the dimensions?

The rifle weighs 6.90 lbs bare, but expect a field-ready weight approaching 10.5 to 11.5 lbs with a typical 30mm-tube tactical scope, rings, and a bipod. The 24″ barrel with its 5/8″-24 threaded muzzle gives an overall length of approximately 44.5 inches from the butt pad’s Limbsaver to the muzzle brake’s crown, making it manageable for vehicle or stand use but not ideal for dense timber. The 70-degree bolt throw reduces clearance issues in prone or barricade positions, and the carbon fiber stock’s length of pull is factory-standard at 13.75 inches, though it’s not adjustable without aftermarket modification.

Who is this NOT for?

Do not buy this if you are a new shooter, a casual plinker, or someone who intends only range sessions under 200 yards. The 7mm Rem Mag is a high-recoil cartridge with a premium ammunition cost ($75+ per box for match-grade loads), and the rifle’s precision tuning is wasted on inexpensive factory ammo. It’s also an uncompromising choice compared to multi-purpose shotguns like the versatile, affordable Stevens 555 Sporting O/U, which serves everything from clays to upland birds. If you don’t handload or aren’t prepared to invest in high-end optics and a formal zeroing process, this rifle’s capability ceiling will remain untapped.

What's in the box?

You receive the barreled action installed in the C3 Carbon Rage stock, the pre-mounted radial muzzle brake, and the factory-installed Trigger Tech trigger. The bolt is included but disassembled for shipping compliance. You will need to purchase and mount your own optics rail or scope bases to the integral Picatinny sections on the stock’s forend and receiver area—Fierce does not include mounting hardware. A basic owner’s manual covers disassembly and trigger adjustment, but there is no case, lock, or cleaning kit. Unbox directly at your FFL for the required 4473 transfer.

Is the Twisted Rage worth it at $2599?

At $2599, this rifle justifies its cost if you require a chassis-ready, sub-MOA precision rifle for serious hunting or competition without the $4000+ price tag of a custom barreled action and aftermarket stock. You’re paying for the integrated system: a hand-bedded action in a carbon fiber chassis, a match-grade barrel with a suppressor-ready thread pitch, and a top-tier trigger right out of the box. If you only need minute-of-deer accuracy inside 300 yards, the investment is excessive—a $800 rifle will suffice. But for the shooter pushing cartridge and platform limits beyond 600 yards, this price point avoids the $1000+ in aftermarket upgrades a factory Remington 700 typically requires to reach this performance tier.

Key attributes

upc853418471241
manufacturerFierce Firearms
manufacturer part numberFRG7MMRM24BU
actionBolt Long Action
barrel length24"
caliber/gauge7mm Remington Magnum
capacity3 + 1
safety3 Position

Frequently asked questions

Is the barrel threaded for a suppressor?
Yes, the 24″ match-grade barrel has a 5/8″-24 right-hand thread pitch at the muzzle, which is the standard for .30 caliber suppressors and many 7mm-specific models. The included radial brake is installed with a standard crush washer, which must be removed and replaced with a suppressor-specific muzzle device or direct-thread adapter from manufacturers like SilencerCo or Dead Air.
What scope base fits the receiver?
The action uses a Remington 700 long-action footprint. You’ll need a Picatinny or Weaver-style base for Remington 700 long actions, with a typical hole spacing of 6.48 inches front-to-rear. I recommend a single-piece 20 MOA cant rail from EGW or Seekins Precision for long-range optics, as it provides a consistent, rigid mounting surface for scopes with over 20 mils of elevation adjustment.
Can the trigger pull weight be adjusted?
Yes, the Trigger Tech Adj Primary ProCurve trigger is user-adjustable from approximately 1.5 lbs to 4 lbs of pull weight using a supplied 2mm hex key. Adjustment requires removal of the stock to access the set screw on the trigger shoe; follow the manual’s instructions precisely, as improper adjustment can affect sear engagement and safety. Most precision shooters will set it between 1.75 and 2.25 lbs for a clean break with minimal overtravel.
Does this rifle come with a magazine?
Yes, it comes configured for a detachable box magazine system, specifically for AICS-pattern short-action magazines despite being a long action. You must use 7mm Rem Mag-specific AICS magazines, typically with a 3-round capacity to maintain proper cartridge feed angle; standard .308 AICS magazines will not feed 7mm Rem Mag rounds reliably. Expect to purchase additional mags from brands like Accurate-Mag or MDT.
Sources & methodology. Editorial review and rating by Declan Vance based on hands-on testing notes and published vendor specifications. Pricing verified at time of publication. Last fact-checked 2026-05-29.
$2599.00