Lower BC aside, the main difference between match bullets and hunting bullets is jacket thickness. Hunting bullets generally have much thicker jackets, in order to hold together on impact and give good terminal performance. With target bullets, the jacket is very thin, and usually of higher quality control as far as consistency of thickness. This should result in a bullet that has even weight distribution around the perimeter, where rotational forces have the strongest effect. A bullet that spins true, theoretically should fly true. With that being said, some "hunting" bullets can be very accurate. The Nosler Ballistic tip jumps to mind. I've had phenomenal accuracy in some rifles with those. Cost, however, is higher than many "target" bullets. For what it's worth, the Hornady A-max is the best deal going for value in a target bullet. YMMV.