I've always lived in cities and would never go near a real gun (I guess unless I was defending my life or that of a loved one) and I was shocked at VRLA when I was surprisingly good at shooting virtual reality cans, VR clay pigeons and other objects with a VR gun. If more people who shoot for sport would stick to VR or video game shooting, this would be a much better world. I hope I can live the rest of my life without ever even seeing a real gun. Ironically, a lot of my art consists of sci-fi sexy girls with big sci-fi guns but I'm actually kinda spoofing the genre...
I think there's something important to remember here. Hivewire isn't selling actual guns, and I'm pretty sure if you put that model through a 3d printer, you wouldn't get anything useful. I'm an anti-gun activist myself. I write my congressmen almost every week about gun legislation and get in strange fights with my sister, who won't come with me when I take my great-nieces to the museum because it's legally open-carry, but she owns a shot gun because she lives in the country and worries about her neighbors.
That being said, I want to be able to use guns in my art work. (And incidentally, I consider many video games a kind of art). You mentioned that many native tribes don't use guns to keep wild animals at bay. That's true, but the same can't be said about many of the white explorers and colonists who have gone to Africa over the years. To quote, of all things an Irish rebel song
Black and Tan about the British forces:
Come tell us how you slew
Those brave Arabs two by two
Like the Zulus they had spears and bows and arrows,
How you bravely slew each one
With your sixteen pounder gun
And you frightened them poor natives to their marrow.
There's definitely a place for guns in telling the story of Africa, and I don't think it should be glossed over. Art shouldn't hide from the ugly things in the world. I applaud your stand against poaching. I'm all for it. But the story of poaching is in many ways a story of guns. And how can we talk about it in our art if we can't represent guns? A render of a guy facing down a big cat with a knife or bow and arrow might look brave. One of a guy a mile away with a high powered rifle, not so much.
My only issue with the shotgun is that I don't think it's the right kind of gun for the jungle, but then, Dawn and Dusk's mid length hair is also on sale, and they aren't significantly 'jungly' and that doesn't really bother me.