7 unique real-world scenario targets. Hostage situations. Armed criminals. Office attacks. The same scenarios law enforcement trains for — now available for your range sessions.
If your training targets don't look like real threats, you're not training for real threats.
Circles. Silhouettes. Scored zones. They build accuracy — but they don't build decision-making. In a real encounter, you need to process a scene, identify the threat, and shoot accurately. At the same time.
Full-color real-world scenes. Armed criminals. Innocent bystanders. Hostages. Your brain has to process the scenario before you pull the trigger — exactly like it does in real life. That's the training gap most shooters never close.
Studies show that officers who train with scenario-based targets make faster, more accurate threat ID decisions under stress. The same applies to concealed carriers. If you've never aimed at a scene — only shapes — you're behind.
Each target presents a unique real-world threat. Mix them at the range for unpredictable, realistic training.
Armed male suspect in a direct confrontation. The foundational scenario — clear threat, clear shot. Train target acquisition on a realistic human figure.
Two armed suspects. Forces split-second decisions: which threat is more immediate? Train transitions between targets and threat prioritization.
Armed female suspect. Breaks the subconscious bias that threats only look one way. In reality, threats don't have a demographic. Train without assumptions.
Hooded suspect — partially obscured face. Reduced visual information means harder threat ID. Train to assess threats with limited facial recognition.
Suspect holding a hostage at knifepoint. The hardest shot in defensive shooting — a narrow engagement window with an innocent person inches from the threat.
Armed robbery in progress with a female hostage. Environmental context (store setting) adds decision complexity. Shoot or don't shoot?
Active threat in an office environment. The modern nightmare scenario. Train for the situation everyone hopes never happens but should be ready for.
All 7 scenarios. 700 targets total. Every threat type covered.
$524.93 — $0.75/target
🎯 SHOP ALL SITUATIONAL TARGETSThese aren't just targets — they're a training system. Here are the drills that get the most out of them.
Mix all 7 targets randomly. At each lane, assess the scenario before engaging. Some require headshots (hostage), some require rapid transitions (multiple threats), some require restraint.
Face the target, turn away. On a timer, turn and engage. The extra cognitive step of processing the scene (not just seeing a bullseye) trains real-world response time.
Pair with the Axle Targets No Shoot Target. Randomly alternate hostage scenarios and no-shoot targets. One wrong shot = fail. Builds trigger discipline under stress.
Have a partner set up targets without you seeing them. Approach, assess, and engage. Debrief after — did you ID the threat correctly? Did you avoid hitting the hostage?
Full-color targets work brilliantly with flashlight drills. The color detail forces proper light technique — you can't just aim at a shadow. You have to actually see the threat.
Start with single-threat scenarios → add multiple threats → add hostage scenarios → add time pressure → add movement. Build competence in layers.
Scenario-based training is mandatory for most departments. These targets supplement force-on-force with flat-range realism.
If you carry daily, you need to train for what you'll actually encounter. Bullseyes don't prepare you for a parking lot robbery.
Force-on-force is expensive. These bring scenario training to the flat range at a fraction of the cost. Use for judgment drills and qualifications.
Corporate security, executive protection, venue security — all face scenario-based threats. Train on targets that look like the environments you protect.
Every round at a bullseye teaches your hands. Situational targets teach your hands and your brain. That's the difference between a shooter and someone who's prepared.
🎯 SHOP SITUATIONAL TARGETS