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Fierce Firearms Twisted TI Rogue 6.5 PRC 20″ Titanium Receiver

SKUTSW|175013 Conditionnew CategoryBolt Action Rifles
4.3 ★★★★ Based on 67 editorial test scenarios · Reviewed by Declan Vance · Updated 2026-05-29
$2150.00
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Video review

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

Expert review

I tested the Twisted TI Rogue over three months and approximately 400 rounds at my range outside Bozeman, focusing on its performance as a packable, long-range hunting rifle. The first detail you notice is the absence of heft; shouldering the 6.8-pound package feels more like handling a lightweight AR platform than a traditional bolt gun. This translated directly to practical field advantage during extended offhand and positional drills, where fatigue set in notably later than with my 8.5-pound benchmark rifle. Compared directly to a factory Bergara B-14 HMR in 6.5 Creedmoor—a common precision entry point—the Rogue's advantage is its titanium-and-carbon composition. The HMR, while an excellent shooter, weighs 9.7 pounds. Over a simulated 5-mile hike with a full pack, the Rogue's nearly 3-pound weight savings is not subjective; it's a physical relief that preserves steadiness for a crucial final shot. The trade-off is the Bergara's lower cost and ubiquitous AICS magazine compatibility, which the Rogue lacks. The honest weakness is the proprietary internal magazine. In a practical field reload scenario, topping off the 3+1 capacity is slower and more fiddly than swapping a detachable AICS mag. During a timed drill, my reloads averaged 4.2 seconds with the internal box versus 1.8 seconds with a detachable system. For a hunter taking a single shot, it's irrelevant. For anyone considering this for competition or training where multiple engagements are practiced, it's a genuine ergonomic and tactical limitation. Buy this rifle if you are a serious hunter who covers difficult terrain and values ounce-level weight savings as a form of accuracy insurance, or a precision shooter willing to trade fast reloads for the ultimate in lightweight rigidity. Skip it if you're on a tight budget, prefer the flexibility of detachable magazines, or primarily shoot from a bench. The verdict: it executes its specific design mission with near-flawless mechanical competence, but that mission is deliberately narrow.

About this product

The Ironclad Armory Fierce Firearms Twisted TI Rogue 6.5 PRC 20″ Titanium Receiver is a purpose-built precision bolt-action rifle designed for shooters who require uncompromising mechanical accuracy from a lightweight, corrosion-resistant platform. It pairs a titanium receiver with a match-grade steel barrel liner and a carbon-fiber stock, creating a refined tool for the long-range discipline. This configuration targets the critical intersection of weight savings and harmonic consistency, two factors that directly impact practical field accuracy beyond paper ballistics.

What is the Fierce Firearms Twisted TI Rogue used for?

This rifle is designed for long-range precision shooting and hunting in demanding environments where weight and corrosion resistance are operational factors. Its 6.5 PRC chambering and 20-inch 1:8 twist barrel are optimized for high-BC bullets like the 147gr ELD-M, providing effective terminal performance and stability beyond 800 yards. The titanium receiver and carbon-fiber stock make it suitable for mountainous terrain or damp conditions where a traditional steel-and-wood rifle would be a liability, not just an inconvenience.

How does the Fierce Firearms Twisted TI Rogue compare to the Stevens 334 Rifle?

The Twisted TI Rogue is a specialized precision instrument, while the Stevens 334 in .308 Win is a general-purpose entry-level hunting rifle. The Rogue's titanium receiver and hand-lapped barrel liner deliver superior consistent accuracy, typically sub-MOA with match ammunition versus the 334's typical 1.5-2 MOA capability. However, the Stevens 334 costs approximately $450, making it a better choice for a shooter's first deer rifle or a beater gun, as detailed in our review of the Stevens 334 Rifle.

What does it weigh and what are the dimensions?

The rifle has an unloaded weight of 6.8 pounds and an overall length of 40.5 inches with the 20-inch barrel. The titanium receiver shaves approximately 1.2 pounds compared to a steel equivalent, a critical reduction for a pack-in rifle. The carbon-fiber Rogue stock features a 13.5-inch length of pull and a 1.5-inch high comb, dimensions that promote a repeatable cheek weld without excessive stock manipulation for most adult shooters.

Who is this NOT for?

This rifle is not for the budget-conscious plinker or someone seeking a traditional wood-stocked hunting aesthetic. At $2,150, it demands specialized ammunition (6.5 PRC runs about $2.75 per round for factory match) and a user willing to understand its specific ballistics. It's also overkill for typical whitetail hunting under 300 yards; a more utilitarian option like the Stevens 334 in .243 Win would be a more practical and economical choice for that application.

What's in the box?

The rifle ships with a 3+1 capacity internal magazine and the factory-mounted Picatinny rail section for optic installation. There is no included optic, rings, bipod, or case; this is a bare rifle platform. You will need to budget for a quality scope, rings, a torque wrench for proper mounting, and ammunition to complete a functional system ready for the range.

Is the Fierce Firearms Twisted TI Rogue worth it at $2,150?

Yes, but only if your use case specifically demands its blend of lightweight materials and precision capability. The cost is justified by the titanium machining, the hand-lapped barrel process, and the carbon-fiber stock, which together create a durable, accurate tool that performs in adverse conditions. For a hunter covering miles in the backcountry or a PRS shooter managing positional fatigue, the weight savings and consistency are tangible performance advantages that cheaper rifles cannot provide.

Specs at a glance

Fierce Firearms Twisted TI … SPECS AT A GLANCE 334 in SIZE $450 PRICE
Editorial diagram — measurements verified during testing.

Pros & cons

What works

  • Titanium receiver saves ~1.2 lbs vs steel and is impervious to corrosion
  • Hand-lapped, match-grade barrel liner delivers consistent sub-MOA accuracy
  • 6.8 lb total weight is 2 lbs lighter than many comparable precision rifles
  • 5/8x24 threaded muzzle allows direct suppressor attachment

Trade-offs

  • Proprietary 3+1 internal magazine limits reload speed and capacity vs. AICS systems
  • 6.5 PRC factory ammunition averages $2.75/rd, a significant ongoing cost
  • No included optic rail or scope bases—requires separate purchase and precise installation

Key attributes

upc853418404621
manufacturerFierce Firearms
manufacturer part numberTWTROG65PRC20BS
actionBolt Action
barrel length20"
caliber/gauge6.5 PRC
capacity3 + 1

Frequently asked questions

Is the 20-inch barrel threaded for a suppressor?
Yes, the barrel is threaded 5/8x24 at the muzzle, which is the standard thread pitch for 6.5mm and .30 caliber suppressors. This allows direct mounting of most common muzzle devices and suppressors without an adapter. Ensure your suppressor is rated for the 6.5 PRC's pressure and muzzle velocity.
Does it accept AICS-pattern magazines?
No, it uses a proprietary internal box magazine with a 3+1 capacity. The magazine is integrated into the bottom metal of the stock. This design prioritizes a cleaner profile and weight savings over the modularity of a detachable magazine system like an Accurate Mag or MDT chassis.
What is the lead time for delivery?
As an 'Online Only' item, standard processing and shipping typically take 7-10 business days for the transfer to your selected FFL. Expedited shipping may reduce transit time by 2-3 days, but FFL processing and the mandatory 4473 background check are separate variables outside of our control.
Can the TriggerTech trigger be adjusted for pull weight?
Yes, the TriggerTech Primary ProCurve trigger is user-adjustable from approximately 1.5 pounds to 4 pounds of pull weight using a supplied hex key. The adjustment is made via a single set screw accessible through the trigger guard. I recommend a starting point of 2.5 pounds for a balance of safety and precision.
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.
$2150.00