With the exception of dead rear or dead frontal shots I wouldn't hesitate to use ELDMs at creed velocity, espcially if the kid is a good shot. I've been plonking a bunch of stuff with them in 7mm and it's pretty surprising what they will pass through. I'm shooting 180g 7mm at roughly creedmoor speeds, so I've got more momentum but the 180 is notoriously delicate. Anyway it will pass through 2.5" blocks of laminated white oak from 50 to 550 y. Not bad. Deer shoulders shouldn't be an issue. At the same time fragmentation will occur with the minimal resistance, a huge positive for quartering/rear lung shots. Target bullets have limitations of course but I wouldn't think twice about it if that's what you can get. Elk I'd definitely balk, and on large bucks I'm not sure I'd aim for shoulder balls at close ranges, but it's absolutely viable. As others have pointed out the difference between a target ELDM and a hunting Nosler ballistic tip is extremely esoteric. Some negativity toward the idea is based on legitimate failures to perform, but a lot of poo-pooing is sanctimonious grandstanding on one hand and really bad user choices on the other. There are examples of failure but I've also seen traditional hunting bullets fail, including core-lokts which are pretty delicate daisies. At the same time people carefully take deer with .243 varmint bullets all the time. What's the difference between a varmint bullet and an ELDM? BC, SD, and they box they put it in? Anyway I hunted with monos instead of ELDMs this year but it really came down to a coin toss and the fact that I was in close cover that day. I'd absolutely hunt with the Hornadys if that's what was available.