I mean no offense, but as it stands it's really difficult to precisely fire with super good advice. Especially in situations where the target has a smaller than average critical spot or point on their body (such as the head of a guardian in the crucible). With super good advice bouncing around as much as it does now getting closer would seem like the better option, but when it comes to getting closer to the target with SGA, the risk definitely outweighs the reward in crucible unless you get extremely lucky.
As it stands I feel as though if you want to land a critical shot with SGA, it takes a certain amount of luck to achieve that rather than skill. No amount of recoil compensation, or recoil pattern predictability on the player's part is really going to help lessen the severity of SGA's randomized recoil pattern.
I'm not saying that SGA should be a laser beam, but the player should be able to RELIABLY keep their crosshairs on the central body mass of a target without having to get within EXTREMELY close range. What's the sense in using an exotic heavy weapon that underperforms at close range due to the shotguns and fusion rifles that specialize at that particular range, when you can use other legendary and exotic heavy weapons that can very reliably pick guardians off at a distance with or without tracking rounds.
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By all means. Controlled fire doesn't necessarily mean "100% accuracy under fully automatic fire", however. Recoil compensation is nigh impossible with randomized recoil, but shot pacing is certainly possible. Idealistically, SGA in the crucible would perform similarly to most other machine guns in the common player's hands, 2-4 kills before someone shuts you down. But in the hands of someone skilled with both the weapon and map control, it would become a veritable force unto its own, such that the opposing team would begin outlying strategies to remove the wielder rather specifically. [i]"That guy needs to go. Now. Use your supers, if anyone still has rockets..."[/i] The vicious recoil would represent both a skill gap and a pivot in the weapon's efficiency; where one sloppy kill with Thunderlord or Corrective Measure is pretty easily forgiven, it could drain SGA of half its reserve. It has to be this way. If it's too easy to use, even a decent player could very easily become virtually unstoppable. I'm sure there's a gray area between its current state and "no recoil whatsoever" which could be explored, and I would leave (as none of us have a choice either way) the final state of the design in the hands of the developers themselves. Seeing as they believe the most recent stability buff to be all it needed, when it works against its current exotic effect, I would surmise that they wouldn't both increase it further and make it also beneficial to utilizing its exotic effect.