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Beretta and Mossy Oak Introduce the Mossy Oak® Greenleaf® Beretta A300 Ultima Turkey Shotgun

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Beretta and Mossy Oak just dropped a turkey-hunting powerhouse that’s got 2A enthusiasts buzzing: the Mossy Oak® Greenleaf® Beretta A300 Ultima Turkey shotgun. Chambered in 12 or 20 gauge, this gas-operated semi-auto beast rocks an MSRP of $1,899 and sports Mossy Oak’s iconic Greenleaf camouflage—a pattern born from decades of obsessive real-world testing in timber thickets and hardwood bottoms. It’s not just a skin-deep collab; Beretta’s A300 platform, already a reliability king with its Blink gas system for blistering follow-ups and reduced recoil, gets turkey-specific upgrades like a 24-inch barrel with Beretta’s B-Lok forearm, extended choke tubes (including a dedicated turkey constriction), and a shim kit for perfect patterning. For spring gobbler chasers, this means vanishing into the greenleaf understory while delivering 3-inch magnum loads with surgical precision—no more patterning struggles or ghosts in the decoys.

What elevates this beyond a seasonal gimmick is how it fuses proven engineering with tactical savvy, underscoring why the shotgun remains a 2A cornerstone. In an era of AR-15 fever, the A300 Ultima reminds us that gas semis aren’t just for clays or home defense—they’re versatile workhorses for hunters facing real-world variables like wet feathers, rust-prone environments, and the need for quick second shots on a strutting tom. Mossy Oak’s Greenleaf isn’t flashy; it’s a no-nonsense evolution of their Bottomland DNA, optimized for Midwestern and Southern woods where light filters through oak leaves, making concealment effortless. Priced competitively against custom builds, it democratizes high-end turkey gear, letting everyday carriers defend their lease without breaking the bank.

For the 2A community, this release signals manufacturers doubling down on purpose-built tools amid regulatory headwinds—think potential lead ammo bans or gauge restrictions that could kneecap hunting access. It’s a subtle flex: Beretta’s exporting their Italian precision to American woods, bolstering domestic production lines while Mossy Oak reinforces camo as cultural armor. Grab one before turkey season, and you’re not just hunting; you’re investing in the self-reliance ethos that keeps our rights loaded. Who’s patterning theirs first?

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