Against Late Fall Hardwoods, Anywhere scores 33/100 (), while Mountain Shadow scores 44/100 ().
Based on color alignment, breakup scale, and texture density, the AI sees an approximate 11-point lean toward Mountain Shadow in this particular environment.
HECS Hunting Anywhere and King's Camo Mountain Shadow are both mixed-scale patterns, so they behave similarly from a scale point of view. Both patterns balances micro and macro elements, keeping them fairly steady across different shot distances. They are also similar in overall density, so neither one is dramatically busier or more open.
HECS Hunting Anywhere vs King's Camo Mountain Shadow
HECS Hunting Anywhere and King's Camo Mountain Shadow have been analyzed using our CamoMatrix AI engine, which measures scale, density, and edge behavior directly from the flat pattern artwork. Both land in the mixed-scale category, meaning they balance fine texture with larger breakup blocks instead of living at one extreme. Density is similar, so neither pattern overwhelms the eye or leaves too much empty space. Edge style diverges: HECS Hunting Anywhere uses sharper, harder transitions, while King's Camo Mountain Shadow leans into smoother, blended transitions. Softer edges often melt better into natural backgrounds, while harder edges can create stronger breakup in certain lighting. King's Camo Mountain Shadow's numeric scale index runs slightly higher, nudging it a bit more toward macro breakup, while HECS Hunting Anywhere stays finer on average. King's Camo Mountain Shadow lands slightly higher on the density index, adding a bit more visual texture. That can help in chaotic or brushy terrain where extra breakup is useful. As always, these results come from flat pattern imagery. Real-world performance depends heavily on terrain, season, and how the garments fit and move.
This is a pattern-only comparison from flat artwork. Terrain, season, and real backgrounds will still push one or the other ahead in specific setups.
Learn how the CamoMatrix AI evaluates camouflage patterns
Defines the dominant size of shapes in the pattern.
Indicates which scale range the pattern leans toward overall.
How busy the pattern is with shapes and noise.
How hard or soft shape boundaries are.