Up to you, I guess? I recently started for a 7mm Weatherby Mag - so two rounds, each weight, by 1/2 grain, from Start load to 1/2 grain past Max load in Nosler 9 manual. Evidence to me said their accuracy load was probably "it", so when I go back, will be probably 3 rounds each within .25 grains of that. Ultimate "proof", for me, will be a couple (2 x) 5 round groups. Sighting in the scope at the same time. So, forty-ish rounds all told?? Completely new-to me rifle, chambering and scope. Box of 50 bullets leaves me 10 or so to go hunting with, and unopened second box.
Is a bit "goofy" for hunting - I should really only care about that first cold, clean barrel shot - is more of a scope sighting in thing. Nice to know where the second or third round will go - but not the same as shooting "groups" - want to kill the damn thing - hopefully land that first shot correctly. Different game if out to ring gongs or make holes in targets, I think?
What I learned from that - rifle was a Weatherby Mark V - nothing that I could tell in several last increments that I went past the Nosler pressure tested Maximum - all appear the same to me - I was NOT using a chronograph - at this initial point, not sure that I care what the actual velocity is. About three rounds in, discovered that a factory new Weatherby case, would not chamber into a Weatherby chamber - all the other 19 did - still do not know why that is. Alliant RL -25 seem to feel "right" - but I was using Weatherby brand, not Nosler brass, and Fed 215, not Remington primers, so was being different than the Nosler 9 manual - hence the "pressure series" ... Note especially that this is what occurred with these loads in this rifle - no good reason to think that similar occurs with yours?? I was using up some previously pulled 7mm 160 grain Partitions in the early stages of the pressure series - seems to be a good use for them?