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To me it's not so much the action style that matters, but the cartridge and sighting style associated with the action that makes the difference.
Bolts and autos other than an AR are usually scoped.
Levers are usually iron sights.
Levers are usually somewhat range limited while the other two are capable of fairly flat trajectories. Both styles are capable of making enough power, but the lever loses range as the bullet gets bigger.
The AR package brings a twist. Many have irons and optics, but if you are looking for power, you'll not find it in the 223. While it's a good close range hunting round, it will shed what little energy quickly with distance. Other cartridges available can "fix" that.
I own all three, but the last time I hunted with anything besides a scoped, bolt action rifle was probably 25 years ago.
Bolts and autos other than an AR are usually scoped.
Levers are usually iron sights.
Levers are usually somewhat range limited while the other two are capable of fairly flat trajectories. Both styles are capable of making enough power, but the lever loses range as the bullet gets bigger.
The AR package brings a twist. Many have irons and optics, but if you are looking for power, you'll not find it in the 223. While it's a good close range hunting round, it will shed what little energy quickly with distance. Other cartridges available can "fix" that.
I own all three, but the last time I hunted with anything besides a scoped, bolt action rifle was probably 25 years ago.