Notice the focus on the tips of the OTM types - the irregularities - that's a marketing deal. Does it really matter? I don't know -
Looks can be deceiving...
I think that anyone who shoots long - meat or paper - is looking for consistency. There are tools out there for metplat uniforming IIRC and at first blush - it looks like there's no way for it to be consistent.
BUT I also suspect that it might have been a case where engineers were looking at the Doppler and not the target. Like watching a dial indicator on a lathe - it bounces all over the place and you'd think that whatever you have in there is completely out of round - then you remember that it's swinging 40% of the dial to show at 3 ten thousands bump (hyperole - you get the idea).
I have a feeling the tip deal has more to do with making the doppler happy than it does affecting the target results.
IMO - the thing here is the interlock and using them on game for people.