Kozak, Hortitsia, Sapsan, Biathlon: How to Pick the Right Zbroia

Zbroia's catalog looks short next to the big Western brands, and that's part of why it works. Every model runs the same recipe — a regulated, magazine-fed PCP that punches above its price — so you're not choosing between a good rifle and a bad one. You're choosing a layout. Get that part right and you'll be happy for years.
Hortitsia: start here unless you have a reason not to
The Hortitsia is the traditional sporter of the family, and it has been in production since 2015 with very little fuss. Barrel out front, conventional stock, magazine behind the breech. If you've shouldered any normal rifle, it feels right the first time. The balance sits where your hands expect it, the trigger is out where it should be, and there's nothing tactical to get in your way.
For a first PCP, or for someone who mostly shoots off a bag, a bipod, or standing in the backyard, this is the easy answer. It comes in the lighter calibers as well as .22, which keeps it versatile for pests and paper alike.
Kozak and Kozak FC: compact without giving up barrel
The Kozak Tactical moves the action back into a semi-bullpup shape, so you keep a full-length barrel in a much shorter overall package. The Kozak FC 2 takes that further into a fully compact bullpup — about as short as you can make a serious air rifle without losing velocity.
This is the layout you want if you hunt from a blind or a truck, work tight cover, or just hate clearing a long muzzle through doorways and brush. You also get rail space for optics, lights, and a bipod. The trade is the bullpup feel: the trigger runs through a linkage, and the balance carries rearward. Most shooters adjust inside a tin of pellets. A few never warm to it. If you can, handle one before you commit.

Sapsan Tactical-M: when you want more downrange
The Sapsan Tactical-M is the heavy hitter. Bullpup chassis, three Picatinny rails, and it's offered up into the larger calibers — including .30 — where the others stop. If your quarry runs bigger than rats and squirrels, or you want real energy at distance, this is the one that has the air and the bore to back it up. It asks more of your fill setup in return, which we get into below.
Biathlon: built around the shot, not the field
The Biathlon leans toward discipline and repeatability rather than knocking around in the woods. If your shooting is mostly off a bench or a known-distance line and you care more about putting pellet on pellet than about carrying weight or clearing brush, it's worth a look. It's a different priority than the hunting guns, and it shows in the handling.
The short version
- First PCP, all-around use, off a rest: Hortitsia.
- Hunting tight spaces, want rails and compactness: Kozak Tactical, or Kozak FC 2 for the shortest package.
- Bigger quarry, more energy, larger calibers: Sapsan Tactical-M.
- Bench and target work first: Biathlon.
Whichever you land on, the buying experience is the same here: configure caliber and barrel, add the air tank if you need one, and check out securely. Every one of these is a genuine factory Zbroia, in stock and shipping in the U.S.
Ready to configure yours?
Browse the full Zbroia lineup, pick your caliber and barrel, and check out securely — in stock and shipping in the USA.
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