I hunted buffalo in 2022. My first dream was to hunt the "wild" Africa. After looking at various opportunity, I realised I just did not have the money for a hunt in Zambia, for example. So I made a 180 and turn back my view to SA. I did shot a buffalo. A really good bull that was NOT where it was supposed to be and who knows where he was going. My point is,
is it considered "wild" when the buffalo is on the wrong side of the fence?
While there, I also hunted a Blue Wildebeest, a Zebra and two Impala Rams. We also spent 4 days going after Elands but in the end I did not connect with an Eland, I just got a glimpse of one at 420 yards. All these animals were "wild" by any aspect, even with that fence running along the property.
Compared to any other hunt in the world, SA is probably the cheapest destination an average Joe like me can afford to hunt outside my province and have a good chance to don't come back empty handed.
It don't take a lot of knowledge in biology to realize that, with exception of some very remote areas in the world, the number of "trophy" animals in a natural population is very very low. And as soon as you ad a little "trophy hunting" in the equation, the success rate will get even lower.
So, or you limit hunting pressure to a bare minimum, and manage those few animals very well, and hope that the climate, diseases or predators don't kill them before they're ready to go, or you restock in some way.
There's no way an outfitter can book and have killed dozen's of trophy animals per year, with very high success rates, without some sort of restocking and artificial feeding.
I would have no problem going back for another buff and plains game, as long as we hunt on a very large property.