I have a Leupold vx6 3-18 with a cds dial and it is OK. Don't get super hung up on the dial. To make a cds dial accurate, you should chronograph your load, and shoot to check bullet drop at various known distances you wish to shoot to. This makes the dial as accurate as possible, EXCEPT:
1) its only good for that load. If you tweak it, the numbers are out.
2) its only good at the elevation you shot at, changes in elevation can affect bullet drop, and conversely, the POI
3) its truly only accurate at the temperature you set it up for. If you shoot at -20 and +80F, that will affect the point of impact also
I've gone both ways, but a scope with a dial in mils or MOA graduation, you can make a dope card for various bullets and loads.
The most important thing I would recommend if you hunt is a zero stop and/or a locking turret. I've missed a coyote at 300 and found dials half a turn out. It's easy to bump them, forget to reset them, or have the kids turn them. With a zero stop you can check your base setting without even looking at the scope.
I find now that I really only hunt to about 400 yards, and mostly under 300 which is about a 5" drop. I just hold over.