DING DING DING! Bingo. Spot on ABOVE. Gun season middle of rut and 2 buck rule absolutely cripple the state. Absolutely the crossbow pressure and added seasons like above add to it as well. The state could be so much better.... They could at least make a HUGE advance if they got that gun season out of the rut and go to a 1 buck rule. That would at least allow it to be far more balanced, better quality, etc.
Let me describe what hunting MI is like. I spent my life until 23 years old there. I hunted maybe 15 counties, most in the bottom tier of the state, a few up towards the top & then my family has owned 160 acres in the UP for hunting since the 1930's.....
-Most seasons after understanding how to avoid people and find the reclusive bucks that found a sanctuary & made it past one season.... I MAYBE saw one 2.5+ year old every other year. Some years I saw none. Those years I saw approximately 5-7 bucks the whole hunting season and those were 1.5 year old bucks. Countless hunts seeing zero bucks, often times seeing no does.
-2 days into gun season, I rarely saw a deer. I went out after but most the time I'd go deerless without a sighting. I was "hardcore" outdoor lover as a kid so somehow I could take it. The vast majority of my buddies couldn't and they quit. I would say almost "everyone" I knew growing up that was a "serious hunter" left to go hunt: Ohio, Ontario, Iowa, Kansas, KY, other Canadian areas, etc. Some are even going to IN now or were as of a few years ago.
-A lot of folks had "buck poles", some years very few deer, other years stacked with 1.5 year old bucks.
-There is some GOOD MANAGED AREAS.... simply, enough guys got together to form COOPS, they all agreed to lay off the killing, limit the harvest, get population to XYZ levels, etc. They essentially said "no thank you" to all the DNR pushed down and self govern. Those are some pockets where you can find some 3-4 year old bucks and a "fun" amount of deer sightings. They tighten up access and police the heck out of it to keep poachers & trespassers out as well, NO ACCESS. I know the amount of guys locking ground up and forming coops has grown since I left. There's more pockets like that.
It's funny because I have a lot of friends that live in Ohio and they all complain about all the MI, PN and surrounding states bombarding their areas

They understand why but they sure pour in like crazy.
And again, in all fairness - I know the # of coops and guys locking down larger parcels to take management into their own hands has grown since I left many years ago. I know some pockets have gotten better. I can say, as a "hardcore" teenager, going out all season and seeing maybe 5 bucks with the amount of time I put in was a joke. Silliness. Why everyone I knew quit, left or just goes out to shoot one and be done (and just cut the rack off and nail it to a board in their garage). It is the best example of what horrible management & regulations do. It's awful. You honestly could not pay me $5,000 to leave Iowa and go hunt a week in MI during the rut. I'd rather stay in Iowa and watch the paint dry on my wall at home. Oh, to this day, we still have the land & cabin in the UP..... I think a buddy of mine shot a 6 point about 3-4 years ago there, a 1.5 year old, it was actually a pretty rare event! Down south another friend shot a 3.5 year old 140" deer and that was a pretty big deal and rare occurrence as well. A few guys each year I hear & see shoot a giant, it's almost the MI LOTTERY! It does happen, just incredibly rare.
Those of us who have lived in these places understand and probably why, ironically, some of the most hard-core conservationists who fight for our fragile resource could very well be from those other states we left the ruined hunting behind. We know what it's like & we want to preserve the great things Iowa does have going for it. I want my kids to be able to hunt a great state and preserve the opportunity, access & quality for them and everyone else. don't want to see it ruined like so many other examples. Don't let this fragile resource be exploited by the special interests.