Given how remarkably naive some above comments are I thought I’d take a minute.
In fairness not all of us have owned guns all our lives including pre Howard. So just a little history here and understanding.
Back in the day. They weren’t called tactical shotguns. Often they were referred to as riot shotguns. Below is the epitome of the traditional look of a gas operated version. A gun i once owned but was dumb enough to hand in.
That looks the part to me. It’s what they once were. What we can no longer own on cat a or b. And it’s a beautiful thing. If you like traditional looks.

The 5 round tube limit. Well we all lived that drama. We got the Adler lever action approved. Eventually after a hard fight.
Then some absolute conservative cuck by the name of Michael Keenan was so far up Scomos asshole he decided to impress him, by banning the import of any lever action shotguns with a capacity of more than 5 rounds. Citing the need for “public safety”
Along comes the succession of straight pulls and lever or button operated.
Still classed as lever actions. And so the mag tube limits still applied.
Finally some common sense and these firearms are now all classed as bolt action shotguns. Cat a.
Didn’t come without a price. Can no longer own 10 round detachable magazines.
But now classed as bolt actions the 5 tube restrictions no longer apply. Of course you can still opt for that if you feel unsafe.
It has nothing to do with lounge rooms, trans kids, Dan Andrews, chem trails , gay frogs, 5g microchips, or even the Jews.
It was just some prick still butthurt we got the Adler through. Tarnishing his party’s image of saving Australia with the toughest gun laws.
The magpul sga stock.
Given the options we have today it’s not the ideal on a gas operated firearm. Particularly a 12 gauge. The hand position acts like a lever under recoil. Assuming you want the firearm for fast follow ups then you don’t want the muzzle rise or at best to mitigate it.
Like any gas operated firearm you want the energy from recoil travelling directly rearward for optimal performance.
It’s not a bad stock. It’s a great stock ergonomically. Just not the best choice in this application.
A sporting clay shotgun doesn’t translate well to shooting pigs on the move or from a vehicle. Considerably awkward.
Barrel length matters.
You can compare clay, skeet, trap shooting for a better understanding. Clay shooting favours a longer barrel.
But for the application case in point, a shorter barrel would be preferable. Because you can swing faster from one target to another and aquire the target faster.
Learn how to use the red dot with both eyes open and you will be a mob of pigs worst nightmare.
The pen is mightier than the sword. If the pen is used to order more swords.