Bowtech Eva Gen3 Review
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Editors' review
Bowtech builds one women's-specific bow, and for its third generation the Eva Gen3 got shorter, faster, and more aggressive. Where the Eva Shockey Gen 2 ran a long, forgiving 30-inch axle-to-axle frame on a 7-inch brace, the Gen3 pulls in to a compact 28 inches (ATA - the tip-to-tip cam distance that sets how a bow handles in tight cover) and drops the brace height to 6.125 inches, buying 3 fps and a more maneuverable, treestand-friendly package. At 3.9 pounds it carries Bowtech's full flagship tuning suite - the DeadLock cam, TimeLock no-press adjustment, and the GripLock adjustable grip - the same hardware the brand puts on its unisex flagships, not a stripped-down women's special. The catch is that the redesign trades some of the Gen 2's famously smooth, dead-calm feel for that compactness: shot bare, the Gen3 buzzes more than its predecessor, though a normal hunting setup settles it. This is a bow for the woman who wants to tune her own rig in the field and values a short, quiet, adjustable hunting platform over a long, buttery target-style draw. This review covers the single-SKU Eva Gen3; its predecessor, the Eva Shockey Gen 2, is still in dealer inventory and remains the smoother-drawing alternative.
Finish
Bowtech offers the Eva Gen3 in three finishes: a solid Stealth Grey, a Forest green, and the Mossy Oak Bottomland camo pattern. The Forest option is the one that stands out - a muted, almost minty green that reads as distinctly its own rather than following the turquoise-and-teal palette most women's-marketed bows have leaned on for years. Stealth Grey is the do-everything choice, neutral on a treestand and unremarkable on a 3D range, while Mossy Oak Bottomland is the dedicated concealment pattern for hardwood and timber hunting. The dip-coat and anodized coverage runs evenly across the riser cutouts and the limb pockets. Bowtech notes that alternate and custom decoration options are available subject to upcharges, so a shooter who wants something beyond the three standard looks has a path to it. For a hunting bow the palette is sensibly focused, and the Forest finish in particular gives the Gen3 an identity that doesn't read as a generic women's color story.Riser
The Eva Gen3 rides an aluminum riser built around Bowtech's Dual Lock limb pockets, where the limbs lock into the pockets and the pockets lock into the riser to behave as one rigid structure for shot-to-shot consistency. At 28 inches axle-to-axle it is genuinely compact, and the riser carries the full complement of Bowtech's current hardware rather than a pared-back version. The Integrate Mounting System (IMS) dovetail bolts a compatible rest directly to the riser for clean alignment, and the FLX Guard cable containment system pulls the cables clear of the arrow's path while reducing the cam-induced torque that can steer a shot. Inset Orbit dampeners sit in line with the string's travel to soak up shot energy. In my experience the standout of this riser is how little it asks of the shooter at setup - the IMS rest seats square and the press-free tuning starts from a known reference rather than a guess. It is a compact, feature-complete chassis; the trade-off that comes with the short axle shows up in the shot feel rather than in the riser hardware.Grip
The GripLock grip is one of the Gen3's most practical upgrades over the Gen 2, which did not have it. A single Allen-wrench turn rotates the grip angle from low-wrist to high-wrist or anywhere between, so a shooter can match the grip to her hand and wrist instead of adapting to a fixed shape - and that matters more on a women's-fit bow, where hand size and wrist angle vary widely across the buyer base. Dialing the angle to a neutral, repeatable position is the single most effective way to take torque out of the hand, something a fixed factory grip simply can't offer. The grip surface is low-profile and consistent, the kind that lets the hand find the same place shot after shot. There is no need to buy and swap aftermarket grips to chase a fit. For a shooter who has spent years adapting to a grip that didn't quite suit her, the adjustability alone can be the reason to choose this bow.Limbs
The Eva Gen3 uses split limbs seated in the Dual Lock pockets, offered in three peak-weight options - 40, 50, and 60 pounds - each of which the limb bolts back down by about ten pounds, so the bow covers roughly 30 to 60 pounds depending on which limbs a shooter orders. Per Bowtech, backing a limb only a little off its peak keeps the draw cycle comfortable while storing the most energy, so the smart move is to pick the limb whose peak sits just above the target weight rather than winding a heavier limb far down. The lightest 40-pound limb is an adult hunting limb - its 30-to-40-pound window is a genuine hunting and practice range, not the 20-pound territory of a youth platform - which signals who the Gen3 is built for: a woman hunting at adult poundage. The 60-pound ceiling covers the upper end of where most of this bow's buyers will shoot. Draw weight adjusts through the limb bolts without a press. It is a conventional, proven split-limb layout in a rigid pocket system, and that reliability is the point on a bow meant to be set once and hunted hard across seasons.Eccentric System
The heart of the Eva Gen3 is the full DeadLock cam system - the complete version, not the simplified DeadLock Lite that appears on Bowtech's lower-priced models. DeadLock lets a shooter move each cam left or right along its axle with a turn of a screw to position the bow's energy directly behind the arrow, then lock it in place for a tune that holds; paired with TimeLock, the cams can be repositioned without ever putting the bow in a press. The practical result, borne out in hands-on tuning, is paper-tuned bullet holes reached in a few shots right on the line. Draw length adjusts from 24 to 29 inches to fit shorter-draw shooters, and the let-off is high - a standard 85 percent with an 87-percent setting offered - so holding at full draw stays comfortable, exactly what a hunter at a lower draw weight wants while waiting out an animal (let-off is the percentage of peak weight the cam sheds at full draw, so 85 percent leaves her holding only about 15 percent of the peak). The published IBO speed is 326 fps, rated at the 29-inch top of the draw range; in real-world terms, a 350-grain arrow at a 50-pound, 29-inch setup chronographs 271 fps - a useful, honest number for the lower-poundage shooter this bow targets, since IBO is measured at conditions most of these buyers won't replicate. Against the Gen 2, the Gen3 gains 3 fps on its IBO rating from the shorter brace while keeping the same easy-holding feel at the wall.Draw Cycle/Shootability
The Gen3's draw is consistent from start to finish - it builds steadily without a pronounced hump, settles onto a solid back wall, and does not drop into a deep, lazy valley. Drawing it at a lower hunting weight, I found the cycle firmer than I expected from a women's-fit bow; it is not harsh, but it is stiffer and shallower in the valley than the notably buttery Gen 2, and it asks the shooter to stay engaged on the wall rather than relax into a deep cradle. The back wall itself is firm and well-defined, the kind that rewards a consistent anchor. The honest caveat is shot feel: bare, the Gen3 transmits more hand shock and vibration than its predecessor, enough that more than one shooter has flagged it - the short axle and lower brace appear to be the cause, since both generations carry the same Orbit dampeners. The fix is the setup every hunter runs anyway: add a stabilizer and dampening and the buzz comes down markedly, and the shot is genuinely quiet either way. The takeaway is to judge this bow as a built hunting rig, not bare off the rack - set up, it is a quiet, compact, accurate platform; bare, it shows the trade-off the compact redesign made.Usage Scenarios
Picture the woman who has hunted for a few seasons, maybe started on a borrowed bow or an older Eva Shockey Gen 2, and now wants a dedicated hunting platform built around her draw and her hand. The Eva Gen3 fits that shooter: a 24-to-29-inch draw range covers shorter-draw archers, the 40-to-60-pound limbs put her at real hunting poundage, and the 28-inch, 3.9-pound frame tucks easily into a treestand or a ground blind. The GripLock grip lets her set the angle to her wrist once and forget it; the DeadLock and TimeLock system lets her tune her own bow in the garage or at the range without hauling it to a press. The generous let-off is a quiet advantage on a long sit, when a doe finally steps into the lane after forty minutes of holding still. Where the Gen3 is less at home is the target line for a shooter who wants a long, deep-valley bow to float a pin and relax into - the firmer wall and shorter axle favor the deliberate hunting shot over the all-day spot session. Run as a complete hunting rig with a stabilizer and quiver, it settles into a quiet, maneuverable bow squarely in its element for whitetail, antelope, and similar game at sensible bowhunting ranges.Bowtech Eva Gen3 vs Bowtech Eva Shockey Gen 2, Mathews Lift X 29.5
The most direct cross-shop is the bow the Gen3 replaced, the Bowtech Eva Shockey Gen 2: it runs a longer 30-inch axle-to-axle frame on a more forgiving 7-inch brace, starts at a lower 30-pound draw weight, and is widely described as the smoother-drawing, calmer-shooting of the two - for a shooter who prizes a buttery draw and a forgiving setup over compactness and 3 extra fps, the still-available Gen 2 is a genuine alternative rather than a downgrade. Cross-brand, the Mathews Lift X 29.5 at a $1,359 launch MSRP is the natural comparison: Mathews builds no women's-specific platform, but its shortest-axle flagship suits smaller-framed and shorter-draw shooters, countering with Mathews' signature dead-quiet shot and Switchweight draw-weight modules in place of the Gen3's field-tunable DeadLock and adjustable grip. The decision comes down to priorities: the Bowtech Eva Gen3 for the woman who wants to tune her own compact hunting rig in the field and values a women's-fit grip and draw range, the Bowtech Eva Shockey Gen 2 for the shooter who wants the smoother, more forgiving longer-brace draw, and the Mathews Lift X 29.5 for the buyer who puts Mathews' quiet shot and resale first.
