And, extremely long range bullets intended for match and and sniper use are also usually boattailed to boot and sometimes have extended 'noses' which, one understands, not only minimize drag but also better deal with atmospheric variations encountered in flight.
The problem with BP is bullet upset. BP will deform bullets made of soft alloys. This is why slug guns historically shot bullets cast in two pieces and swaged together, soft base - hard nose.
A long skinny nose like found on a Berger bullet in .264 or .308 will slump when fired with BP unless very hard. Something like Lymans #2 alloy. I had a 380 gr bullets from Hoch mould that was very accurate in #2 but if cast 1:40 it would full keyhole at least one shot in 5 at 100 yards.
People are shooting long bullets in 38 caliber BPCRs with significantly faster twists that are needed for a 3-3.5 caliber bullet. The problem with cast lead bullets and fast twists is that cast bullets are never perfect and the fast twist can be a cause of fliers.
I have a rule of thumb... If I want to shoot bullets I use a BPCR. If I want the shoot low drag bullets I shoot something like my AR or 6.5 Swede.
The near ultimate right now in low recoil, low drag and flat trajectory is the 260 Remington.
But this is pretty far from shooting a traditional American Long Rifle.
When a person decides to shoot and hunt with a traditional ML the shooter needs to accept the fact that its impossible to shoot .600 BC bullets and understand that while certainly not the ideal projectile from the exterior ballistic standpoint the round ball works very well for hunting and target shooting WITHIN IT'S RANGE. So folks are better advised to find the best load for their round ball rifle and practice with it and quit agonizing over trying to get the rbs hunting range extended by 25 yard or increasing its "remaining energy".
If the best ballistics are a concern then folks should buy a 260 Remington and a set of loading dies.
Dan