A "good slug gun" is relative and very subjective. It wont shoot slugs as well as a longer 700mm setup would. The reason is: to get the higher fps/fpe you need to crank up the tune; which uses a lot more air and runs the risk of upsetting the slug as it leaves the barrel if not done correctly. Compacts are best for shorter ranges and lighter slugs or pellets. Again its relative. I feel confident I can hit a ground squirrel at about 100yds with my little 22 Cal Wildcat. Thats pretty far for a lower power setup, but not nearly as far as my 700mm 25 Cal setup. You can tune your compact Wildcat to shoot lighter Nielsens just fine, but you wont see the same velocities as a 700mm. So I think it depends on what you want your rig to do. I think my Wildcat is a great slug gun, so far as I stick to the light slugs and shorter ranges.
As far as accuracy goes, the goal is to have enough velocity combined with twist rate to stabalize. Past that you want a good tune that isnt blowing the slug around after it leaves the muzzle. The actual speed has no bearing on accuracy, but it will affect trajectory and wind deflection.
And with everything shown 860 fps seems to be the winner
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