"It never fails to amaze me that people still put so much emphasis on velocity/energy, some even stating minumums to guarantee kills on game of this size, or that size."
Now Dave, you have to admit, the manufacturers of firearms and ammo, have done a tremendous job of keeping the shooting public convinced of that!
Otherwise, all these short and super short magnums of various dimensions, as well as some other designs, would never have seen the light of day, if it were not for all the bs fed us under the general heading of ballistics.
I grew up in the era when all bush homesteaders had to have wild meat, 12 months of the year, or the family would go hungry. They shot moose and elk with any rifle they happened to have, when that terrible age, known as the great deperession, overtook the world.
I had a considerable older brother who kept our rather large family well supplied in elk and moose meat, but other families weren't so lucky. I have often seen school kids going hungry, when the hens had quit laying for the winter, the cow was drying up, the vegetables in the cellar were nearly gone and the dad couldn't get a moose.
No one ever questioned whether a rifle was good enough for big game, they just took their rifle, whatever it was, and shot game with it. One homesteader, a family friend, had a Winchester 351 self loading. He bought a box of 20 shells for it and when the box was empty he had killed nine moose with the box of shells.
Another fellow killed thirty moose with a 30-30. I asked him how many he had wounded that had got away. He thought for a while, then said, "I can't remember any moose that got away wounded."