There was a thing at one time to install 1" centre fire scopes onto .22 rifles - their parallax settings often were 150 yard - usually, though, they had MUCH brighter and maybe clearer images than you would see through the small diameter 22 scopes of the day. However, after installing a few - that parallax error was very evident on 20 or 25 yard targets, if you checked for it - even though the "customer" did not appear to know anything about it - his claim was usually how well the thing worked, compared to what he was using before.
It is possible that those dudes had really consistent "cheek weld" on their rifles - hence any parallax sighting error would be the same every time - and as a result, their bullets would always be going to where they wanted them to.
A few summers ago, I had a "new", directly out of the box, Leupold fixed four power rimfire scope - the pamphlet said the "parallax" was set for 60 yards. On sandbags in my shop, looking through it at a knot in a nearby tree through the garage doors - the knot was perhaps the size of a golf ball - about size of a squirrel's head, I thought - the knot was perhaps 15 yards from the scope - by moving one side to start to see black, then going other way to see black, I could move those cross hairs completely off that knot - either way. That is my understanding what parallax sighting error is about - where your cross hairs align on the target, is a function of where your eye is behind that scope, if you are not at precisely that "parallax free" distance. If your target is big enough, or if you look through the scope consistantly enough - then that error probably won't matter to you.