@GrayJ58 yes you do have to be in the right spot. But to kill one with a bow you have to get much closer, you have to draw undetected, you have to have spent the time to build the skills to be an effective archer. You can't use a rest like you can with a crossbow. You don't have a magnified scope. It adds a layer of skill and dedication that allows for liberal archery seasons, tag limits, etc because the harvest is lower, because it's HARDER. When Joe Schmoe can go to Bass Pro on Friday night, buy a crossbow, slap a scope on it and hit targets out to ranges well past what any semi serious archer is shooting with no skill or practice and kill a deer the very next day...it's a different thing and you're kidding yourself if you think a bow and a crossbow are the same.
Is a compound bow the same as a traditional bow? No. But the level of skill difference between a trad archer and a modern archer is pennies compared to the vast difference in skill between a modern archer and a crossbow user. Night and day.
Please do some research on the crossbow issues that have been created in PA, MI, OH, and other states that actually track crossbow use during archery seasons. It's a disaster, and it arguably takes away opportunities instead of the often used argument that crossbows add opportunity.
Michigan did a comprehensive survey two years after they opened the door to crossbows in archery season. They DOUBLED their crossbow hunters by volume in just TWO years (2009 vs 2011) and crossbow hunters were 19% of "archery" tag holders in 2009 vs 37% in 2011. Imagine what those numbers are now! I believe it's OH that confirmed that well over half and closer to 2/3s of their "archery season" hunters were using crossbows. Link to the Michigan survey:
Keep Iowa Iowa, keep crossbows out of the archery season. The only exception should be for those who physically can't draw a bow and a Dr. will sign off. Hard stop.