Soft, folding gun bags are one of those pieces of kit that seem “nice to have” until your safe is full, the closet is a mess of hard cases, and you are tired of wrestling a six-foot plastic coffin every time you want to go to the range. As someone who has hauled rifles in every type of case from mil-spec hard shells to paper-thin sleeves, I look at folding gun bags through a simple lens: do they actually solve storage problems without compromising safety, protection, or legal compliance.
This article walks through that evaluation in practical terms, drawing on guidance from safety programs like 4‑H Shooting Sports, brand and product guidance from companies such as Zerust, Vulcan Arms, Explorer Cases, and FS9 Tactical, plus storage advice from outfits like Crate Club and real-world forum experiences from long-time gun owners.
What Is a “Folding” Gun Bag, Really?
For this discussion, a folding gun bag is a soft rifle or pistol bag that can compress, fold, or roll up when it is empty, instead of occupying a fixed volume like a hard plastic or metal case. Zerust’s own explanation of soft rifle bags notes that they can be adjusted, folded, and made to fit into tighter quarters during storage or transport. That flexibility is the defining feature here.
Most soft rifle bags and many soft range bags fall into this category. Examples in the broader market include fleece-lined soft rifle bags with built‑in rust prevention, compact soft rifle cases for small carbines, and soft pistol bags or sleeves made from materials like neoprene or ballistic nylon. When they are not in use, they can be folded and stacked on a shelf, slipped into a crate, or even hung from a rack without eating up the same amount of space as a rigid hard case.
There is a second angle on “folding” that shows up in the modern rifle world. Short-barreled rifles and folding‑stock carbines have driven a wave of compact SBR bags. Guides on short rifle bags show cases sized around 28 to 30 inches that carry folding-stock AKs, compact ARs, and similar guns. These are still soft or semi‑rigid bags, but they are built for rifles that fold, collapse, or break down to a shorter overall length. They are not necessarily foldable themselves, yet they represent another way to shrink your storage footprint.
In practice, most owners who talk about “folding gun bags for storage” mean one of two things: a soft bag that folds flat when empty, or a compact bag that enables a shorter folded or broken‑down rifle so the overall storage package takes less room.
Storage Objectives and the Safety Baseline
Before deciding if folding bags are practical, you have to be clear about what you need your storage system to do. Reputable safety programs such as 4‑H Shooting Sports, along with educational material on gun lock boxes, emphasize the same basic principles. Firearms should be stored unloaded. They should be in a locked container or fitted with a locking device. Ammunition should be stored separately. Keys, combinations, or credentials must stay out of reach of children and unauthorized adults.
Articles on lock boxes and locking storage cases underline the idea that a lock is about access control more than absolute theft-proofing. A locked container slows down a curious child or an impulsive visitor, and that delay is often the difference between an incident and a non‑event. Federal travel guidance and transportation rules highlighted by sources like VaultCase and Dulcedom add specific requirements in some situations. For example, air travel in the U.S. requires firearms to be unloaded and placed in a locked hard‑sided container as checked baggage, and rail carriers such as Amtrak follow similar rules, including hard‑sided locked cases under about 62 inches in length and 50 pounds in weight. Some states and cities, including New Jersey and San Francisco, require firearms and sometimes ammunition in vehicles or homes to be in locked containers that are not easily accessible from the passenger compartment.
None of those rules are written around “folding” or “non‑folding” bags. They are written around whether the firearm is unloaded, locked, and inaccessible. That is the baseline.

Any storage solution you choose, including a folding soft bag, has to be evaluated against those requirements first, then against the practical day‑to‑day needs of protecting, organizing, and transporting your gear.
Protection Versus Portability: Where Folding Bags Stand
Impact and Environmental Protection
If you want maximum impact protection and environmental sealing, the industry consensus is clear. Purpose‑built hard cases, like the rugged plastic cases highlighted by Explorer Cases, are where you start. These cases are built from strong, military‑grade plastic with latching lids, waterproof seals, dustproof construction, and even pressure‑equalization valves for altitude changes. They are designed to survive being dropped, stepped on, and bounced around in trucks, boats, and airline baggage systems.
Soft, folding bags trade some of that impact resistance for weight and flexibility. FS9 Tactical’s guide to small gun bags points out that compact padded gun bags shield firearms from dust, moisture, scratches, and accidental impacts during storage and transport. The Vulcan Arms guide on weatherproof gun bags describes soft cases built from tough synthetic materials that still provide protective structure while being lighter and easier to carry. Zerust’s soft rifle bag goes a step further by adding fleece padding plus built‑in rust‑prevention chemistry. That VCI, or vapor corrosion inhibitor, is designed to create a protective environment inside the bag while the fleece and padding absorb bumps and help prevent dings and scratches.
Those are real advantages, but there is an honest trade‑off. A folding soft bag with decent padding is adequate for typical local trips, storage inside a safe, or controlled transport where you handle the gun yourself. It is not the tool you pick when baggage handlers, freight carriers, or extended heavy loads are involved. In other words, if you expect impacts to be severe or unpredictable, a hard case still wins. If your transport and storage exposure is tame, a folding soft bag is usually enough protection and much easier to live with.

Portability and Space Efficiency
Every hunter or competitor who has hiked a few miles with a rifle knows exactly how much a case can get in the way. Soft rifle bags are consistently described in the literature as lighter, more portable, and easier to carry over long distances than hard cases. Zerust calls out this point explicitly, describing soft rifle bags as lighter and better suited to users who have to move their guns over longer distances in the field.
Recent guides to short-barreled rifle bags put real numbers on this. Compact SBR cases like the 5.11 Tactical LV M4 Shorty, Grey Ghost Apparition, and Haley Strategic INCOG carbine bag come in around 29 to 30 inches in length and roughly 3 to 4 pounds for quality models. Even a more heavily padded case like Savior’s Specialist Covert 30 stays under about 8 pounds while offering solid protection. All of them are soft and can be compressed or partially folded when empty.
That weight and flexibility matter in the storage room. Crate Club’s guide to storing gun cases stresses vertical racks, shelving, and modular crates to keep cases off the floor and visible. A gun owner posting on The Firearms Forum described a fully locked storage room where the real problem was not security but what to do with a pile of cases once wall space ran out. Rigid cases were eating floor space and under‑bed space, and the only workable solutions involved free‑standing racks and creative stacking.
This is exactly where folding gun bags earn their keep. Empty soft bags can be folded in half or thirds and stacked like blankets on a shelf, slipped into labeled crates, or hung from a single rod. The Zerust article explicitly notes that soft rifle bags can be folded and made to fit tight storage spaces. In practical terms, that means a dozen folding bags may occupy the volume of three or four hard cases.

For anyone with limited square footage, or a safe already full of rifles, that space efficiency is a primary reason to favor folding bags over rigid boxes.
Security, Locks, and Legal Reality
From a safety and legal standpoint, the key question is not whether a bag folds. The questions are whether it locks, whether it covers the firearm completely, and whether it is used within the rules of your jurisdiction.
The 4‑H Shooting Sports material on gun lock boxes defines a lock box as a secure container, usually with a key, combination, or digital lock, aimed at keeping firearms inaccessible to children and unauthorized users. That same basic concept appears again in VaultCase’s explanation of locking storage cases and in Dulcedom’s discussion of zippered gun bags with locks. These sources all emphasize that locked storage is primarily about access control and accident prevention, particularly around kids, and secondarily about deterring casual theft.
Zippered soft gun bags equipped with integrated locks or lockable zipper pulls fit squarely into that category. Dulcedom describes soft, zipped rifle and pistol bags that use tough tear‑resistant fabric, internal straps, and weather‑resistant construction, combined with lockable zippers, to keep firearms both stabilized and harder to access. VaultCase goes further and explains that a locking case can satisfy certain legal requirements where a generic bag would not, including transport rules for knives and firearms in some European and U.S. jurisdictions.
However, air travel and some vehicle-transport laws draw a clear line. Federal Transportation Security Administration guidance, summarized in the VaultCase material, requires unloaded firearms to be placed in a locked hard‑sided container as checked baggage. Rail carriers like Amtrak follow a similar pattern, specifying unloaded firearms in locked hard‑sided containers under set size and weight limits. That is not a gray area. A folding soft bag, locked or not, does not replace a hard‑sided firearm case in those contexts. At best, it can ride inside the hard case or be used at the destination while the hard case stays in a hotel room or vehicle.
State and local laws around vehicle transport vary more. The locked soft bags discussed by Dulcedom can meet the requirement in some jurisdictions that firearms in vehicles be unloaded, locked, and separate from ammunition. Connecticut’s law on handguns in vehicles, for example, focuses on them being locked in the trunk, a safe, or a locked container such as a glove box, while New Jersey emphasizes a locked container not directly accessible from the passenger compartment. Dulcedom and VaultCase both highlight that local ordinances can be stricter than state law.
In a home where there are no children and the gun room itself is locked, the Firearms Forum poster felt no need for additional locking cabinets and used desiccant packs primarily to manage moisture, not access. That is a rational approach if the room itself meets your safety and legal requirements. In a home with kids or frequent visitors, a folding bag without a lock is not enough. In that case, either a lockable soft bag, a hard case, a safe, or a lock box is the right baseline, with the folding feature acting only as a convenience, not a safety measure.
The practical takeaway is straightforward.
A folding gun bag is security‑neutral until you add a locking system and use it inside a storage setup that meets your local rules. Evaluate the bag as part of a complete system: room locks, safes, lock boxes, and vehicle practices.
Moisture, Rust, and Long-Term Storage
Space and locks are only part of the storage equation. Rust quietly ruins more guns than drops or dents ever will. Multiple sources emphasize that the ideal storage environment is cool, dry, and relatively dark, with stable humidity and temperature. Crate Club’s guide points to moisture and dust as key threats and recommends climate control or at least some environmental management in storage areas, along with desiccant packs such as silica gel.
The owner on The Firearms Forum underscored that point from experience, using desiccant packs in all cases that contain ammunition and in ammo cans as well. While corrosion had not been a major issue when ammunition cycled quickly through the guns, reduced shooting frequency meant ammo and guns would sit longer, and moisture control became more critical.
This is where the design of the bag itself matters. Zerust’s article on soft rifle bags with built‑in rust prevention explains the benefits of VCI, or vapor corrosion inhibitor, integrated into a fleece‑lined soft case. The material is designed to cushion the firearm, wick moisture, and emit corrosion‑inhibiting vapor inside the enclosure. That makes the bag protective not only against bumps and scratches, but also against the slow rust that comes from trapped moisture. The same article warns that generic gun socks or soft sleeves without VCI can actually trap moisture and accelerate rust, particularly in humid environments. Hard cases are not immune either. Without VCI capsules or moisture control, a tightly sealed hard case can accumulate condensation and cause corrosion over time.
For long‑term storage, Zerust argues that a VCI‑equipped soft rifle bag is a comprehensive solution because it prevents corrosion, provides cushioning, and remains portable and easy to grab when you want to move the gun.

Crate Club recommends periodic inspection of stored gun cases at least every few months to catch moisture or wear before it becomes a problem. Combined, the message is clear. If you plan to keep rifles or pistols in folding bags for more than a short period, either use a dedicated rust‑preventive bag or add moisture control like desiccant packs and schedule routine inspections.
A folding bag without any rust‑prevention features is fine for short-term transport or for guns you clean and check regularly. For multi‑month storage in a closet, safe, or locked room, particularly in humid climates, a VCI‑equipped soft bag or equivalent corrosion strategy is worth the extra money.
Discretion and Everyday Practicality
Folding gun bags often overlap with discreet and diversionary bag designs. Modern guides from Pew Pew Tactical, Offgridweb, and FS9 make a similar point in different ways: there are strong reasons to carry guns in bags that do not scream “gun.”
Discreet cases avoid the obvious signs of tactical gear, dropping the camouflage fabrics, MOLLE webbing, and loud patches in favor of neutral colors and simple shapes. Diversionary cases go further by imitating something else entirely, such as a tennis racket case or a guitar bag. The Pew Pew Tactical review of discreet rifle and pistol bags describes violin‑style cases, tennis‑racket‑style cases, and guitar‑shaped bags that carry carbines and SBRs without attracting the same attention as a rectangular rifle case. Offgridweb’s buyer’s guide for short-barreled rifle bags highlights low‑profile daypack‑style designs that look like ordinary hiking packs while carrying compact rifles internally.
FS9’s coverage of small gun bags focuses more on compact pistol and rifle bags with multiple compartments and padded interiors, but the same themes apply. These bags are designed to protect the firearm from dust, moisture, and impact while keeping it out of sight. Many have subdued exterior styling suitable for urban environments or everyday carry contexts.
From a practical standpoint, these discreet soft bags tend to be lighter and easier to fold or compress when empty than their hard counterparts. They also offer social and security benefits. As VaultCase points out for locking luggage generally, locked containers tend to be handled more carefully and kept together during travel. Discreet bags that look like laptop cases, daypacks, or instrument cases are less enticing to opportunistic thieves than obvious gun cases. Pew Pew Tactical’s author framed this in personal terms, noting that they preferred not to carry obvious long gun cases through hotels or suburban neighborhoods to avoid drawing unnecessary attention or calls to law enforcement, even when transport was fully legal.
For storage, the same logic applies. A folding, discreet bag can sit in a closet or safe without advertising its contents to every visitor who happens to see it. If it also folds flat when empty, it will not dominate your storage area once the gun is out and in use.
Value and Cost Considerations
From a value standpoint, the market for gun bags spans everything from budget-friendly soft cases to premium hard cases and highly specialized rust‑preventive or diversion bags. Folding and compact designs appear at every price point.
Guides to discreet and SBR bags provide concrete examples. A compact 5.11 Tactical LV M4 Shorty bag is described at roughly $120. The Grey Ghost Gear Apparition, which doubles as a full hiking pack with concealed rifle storage, runs closer to $180. The Haley Strategic INCOG carbine bag, a versatile soft case that handles bulkier rifles and folding‑stock guns, sits around $195. On the more budget‑friendly end, Savior Equipment’s Specialist Covert 30 soft case is cited around $80 while still carrying one or two short rifles with solid padding.
Pew Pew Tactical’s review of discreet cases adds more data points. A violin‑style case for pistol-caliber carbines and SBRs is priced around $164. A high‑quality EDC backpack with a hidden pistol compartment from Lynx Defense comes in around $199. Subgun‑oriented laptop‑style bags and tennis‑racket‑style diversion cases often land in the $100 to $160 range. Hard cases with custom‑cut foam, such as those from Peak Cases, typically start around $130 and go up depending on configuration.
On the lower end of the price spectrum, simple sling‑style soft rifle packs can be found near $70. For handgun protection inside safes or range bags, SENTRY’s neoprene SlideBoot covers are roughly $12.99 and are repositionable across many storage setups.
The theme is consistent with what brands like Armageddon Gear and Vulcan emphasize in their own buying guides. You should set a budget, but it is usually better to buy once and buy right than to keep replacing flimsy cases. A soft folding bag with quality materials, adequate padding, and either rust‑inhibiting features or room for desiccants is usually more cost‑effective over time than a bargain case that fails at the zipper or lets moisture ruin your finish.
The value decision comes down to mission.

If you never fly with guns and your storage is a locked room or safe, paying top dollar for multiple heavy hard cases may not bring much real benefit; a good folding bag with VCI or moisture control is often enough. If you travel frequently, especially by air or rail, at least one serious hard case is a non‑negotiable expense, and your folding bags become secondary or destination-only tools.
Practical Use Cases: When Folding Bags Shine
When I look at a storage room or a gear plan, I ask where a folding bag can genuinely improve things. Several scenarios come up repeatedly in the sources and in real‑world experience.
The first is the locked safe or gun room that is already full. The Firearms Forum discussion describes a situation where wall space has been maxed out and under‑bed storage is off the table. In that environment, the priority is organizing a pile of cases in a way that keeps guns and ammunition accessible but secure. Folding soft bags, especially those that can be hung from a free-standing rod or compressed into modular wooden crates as Crate Club suggests, help you reclaim floor space without sacrificing basic protection.
Another scenario is the hunter or field shooter who covers real distance on foot. For that user, Zerust’s point about soft bags being more portable than hard cases is not theoretical. Every pound matters when you are walking ridges or moving between stands. A soft folding bag with weather‑resistant construction, as described in Vulcan Arms’ discussion of weatherproof gun bags, protects the rifle from sun and rain while remaining light enough to carry comfortably. Once back at home or camp, the same bag folds and tucks away instead of occupying half a closet.
A third scenario is the owner who loves compact carbines and short rifles. Offgridweb’s SBR bag guide and Pew Pew Tactical’s discreet bag review both make the case for short, non‑obvious soft bags that carry folded‑stock rifles, braced pistols, and short‑barreled rifles no longer than roughly 30 inches overall. These bags tend to be soft, padded, and narrow, making them easy to slip into vehicles, safes, or closets. When empty, they compress or fold much more readily than a traditional 52‑inch full‑length case. For that shooter, folding and compact bags directly translate into more efficient storage.
In each of these situations, the owner still needs at least one robust hard case for major travel or shipping.
But for day‑to‑day storage and local transport, folding bags often carry the load.
Limitations and Failure Modes to Watch For
Folding bags are not a magic solution, and the research points to several pitfalls that show up across soft storage generally.
One risk is underestimating how quickly moisture builds up in closed fabric containers. Zerust warns that ordinary gun socks and soft sleeves without VCI technology can trap moisture and actually accelerate rust, especially in humid environments. Hard cases without VCI capsules or desiccant suffer the same problem. If you use folding bags for anything beyond short-term transport, you need either built‑in rust prevention or an explicit moisture-control plan that includes periodically opening and inspecting the contents.
Another failure mode is buying on price alone. Guides from FS9 Tactical and Vulcan Arms stress durable materials like ballistic nylon or reinforced polyester, along with proper padding and stitching, for a reason. Cheap soft cases with thin fabric and minimal padding do not hold up to daily use, and zippers are notorious weak points. A broken zipper on a folding bag means you have effectively no closure and no security until you replace the entire case.
Crate Club highlights organizational mistakes that apply just as much to folding bags as to rigid ones. Overloading shelves beyond their weight rating, allowing cluttered stacks of cases, and neglecting regular inspection can all lead to damage or safety problems. Folding bags can make clutter worse if you toss them into a pile; they are easy to bury at the bottom of a stack and forget.
Finally, there is the legal blind spot. Dulcedom and VaultCase both emphasize that locking bags or cases must be used within the specific legal frameworks of your state, city, and travel modes. A folding bag with a small luggage lock might be perfectly acceptable for quick transport to a local range in one state, yet fall short of statutory requirements in another where lawmakers demand specific types of locked containers. Assuming that “zippered and locked equals compliant” everywhere is a mistake.
The solution is straightforward but non‑negotiable. Match the folding bag to clearly defined use cases, invest in real build quality and moisture management, and verify transport and storage laws where you live and travel.
Quick Comparison: Folding Soft Bags vs Hard Cases
The following table summarizes how folding soft gun bags stack up against hard cases for typical storage and transport factors, based on the guidance and examples discussed above.
Factor |
Folding Soft Gun Bag |
Hard Gun Case |
Impact protection |
Provides padding and shock absorption suitable for normal handling and local trips; not crush‑proof. |
Rigid shell built to withstand drops, heavy loads, and rough handling such as airline baggage or rough vehicle travel. |
Space efficiency in storage |
Folds or compresses when empty; easy to stack, crate, or hang in tight gun rooms and full safes. |
Occupies full volume at all times; stacks well but quickly consumes floor and shelf space. |
Long-term rust prevention |
Can be excellent if equipped with VCI lining or used with desiccant; generic fabric bags can trap moisture. |
Can be excellent with VCI capsules or desiccant; sealed cases without moisture control may also trap condensation. |
Security and access control |
Requires lockable zippers or integrated lock; suitable for access control in many home and vehicle setups. |
Typically offers stronger lock points and more resistance to tampering or cutting, especially for high‑risk environments. |
Travel compliance |
Works well for local travel where soft locked containers are allowed; not sufficient for airline rules requiring hard‑sided cases. |
Meets common airline and rail requirements when hard‑sided and lockable, assuming size and weight limits are respected. |
Discretion and appearance |
Often available in discreet or diversionary designs that blend in as backpacks, instrument cases, or daypacks. |
Most hard cases look like equipment or gun cases; some are low‑profile but rarely as discreet as soft diversion bags. |
Cost and value |
Wide range from budget to premium; generally cheaper than similarly protective hard cases. |
Usually more expensive per case, but high‑quality models pay off for high‑value rifles, optics, and heavy travel use. |
A Simple Evaluation Framework
When you are standing in front of a potential purchase, the practicality of a folding gun bag comes down to a few direct questions.
Start with fit and mission. The Vulcan Arms guide stresses sizing the bag to the firearm so it is neither too loose nor too tight, and Offgridweb’s compact rifle bag guide uses actual overall lengths to show what fits in practice. If the bag is designed around your rifle’s length, including any optics and accessories, and matches how you actually transport the gun, you are on the right track.
Move to environment. Think about where the bag will live most of the time. Crate Club recommends cool, dry, and dark storage with moisture control, while Zerust points out that soft bags without rust prevention can hurt more than they help in humid spaces. A folding bag with VCI lining or room for desiccant in a reasonably dry closet or gun room is practical. A thin, unlined bag in a damp basement is not.
Then address security. Consider whether the bag itself locks and whether it is part of a larger locked system. The 4‑H lock box material, Dulcedom’s guidance on zippered bags with locks, and VaultCase’s overview of locking containers all agree: access control matters. In a home with children or in a vehicle, your folding bag either needs to lock or live inside something that does. For airline or rail travel, you still need a hard‑sided case regardless.
Finally, look at total cost versus role. If you already own a high‑end hard case for your most valuable rifle, a mid‑priced folding bag with decent padding and rust prevention can be a perfect “daily driver” that saves your hard case for the abuse it was built to take. If you own only budget soft bags and no serious hard case, it may make more sense to invest in one robust hard case first, then add folding bags as your storage footprint grows.
FAQ
Can I store rifles long-term in a folding soft bag?
You can, provided you treat the bag as part of a complete storage system. Zerust specifically recommends VCI‑equipped, fleece‑lined soft rifle bags for long‑term storage because they actively fight corrosion while providing cushioning and portability. Crate Club’s storage guidance and forum experience both suggest adding moisture control such as desiccant and checking stored guns periodically. For long‑term storage in folding bags, prioritize rust‑preventive linings or VCI accessories, maintain a reasonably dry environment, and avoid “set and forget” habits.
Is a folding gun bag enough for vehicle transport?
It depends on your local laws and how the bag is constructed. Dulcedom’s article on zippered gun bags with locks explains that locked, opaque soft bags can satisfy transport requirements in some states when guns are unloaded and ammunition is stored separately. Other jurisdictions and specific situations, such as airline travel, demand hard‑sided locked cases as summarized by VaultCase. In practice, a folding bag that fully covers the gun and locks can be sufficient for many routine trips by personal vehicle, but you must confirm the rules in your state and city rather than assuming.
Are rust-preventive soft bags worth the extra money?
If you live in a humid climate or store firearms for long stretches, the answer is usually yes. Zerust’s discussion of VCI‑equipped soft bags makes a strong case that the combination of fleece padding and vapor corrosion inhibitor is an “all‑in‑one” solution for long guns, especially where generic fabric socks or sealed hard cases without VCI can trap moisture and accelerate rust. Given that even a modest rifle and optic represent a significant investment, the small premium for rust‑preventive materials is a practical way to avoid far more expensive damage later.
Closing Thoughts
From a gear veteran’s perspective, folding gun bags are not a fashion statement; they are a tool for solving a specific set of problems: crowded storage, everyday transport, and rust control. When they are sized correctly, built from real materials, used with proper locks where needed, and paired with moisture management, they are one of the most practical and value‑conscious storage upgrades you can make. Keep one hard case for the abuse and the airlines, then let smart folding bags handle the rest of the work in your safes, closets, and trucks.
References
- https://4-hshootingsports.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/BENEFIT-OF-A-GUN-LOCK-BOX.pdf
- https://www.511tactical.com/how-to-choose-between-a-hard-or-soft-gun-case
- https://byallen.com/gun-storage?srsltid=AfmBOoq8SlmI-SvlShXLYsJED8FXYrXW_jWPsyoQadjEVQkJ5JeyX1Ce
- https://armageddongear.com/what-to-look-for-when-considering-different-gun-cases/
- https://explorercases-usa.com/benefits-of-explorer-gun-cases-for-your-rifles/
- https://www.pewpewtactical.com/best-discreet-rifle-pistol-bags/
- https://www.planooutdoors.com/collections/gun-cases?srsltid=AfmBOooO7CWLu4LhoXCuibT5qdVs3r0v-yH4HQzZOm2YNfMW53Rhevyr
- https://theneomag.com/range-bag-setup-what-to-pack-how-to-stay-organized/?srsltid=AfmBOorigOIUHoZayUddU4_uRnrFhb0A4pEAY9MEr9-KvN_s6GKoWqIK
- https://www.topfirearmreviews.com/post/best-rifle-bag
- https://crateclub.com/blogs/loadout/how-to-store-gun-cases-a-comprehensive-guide-for-tactical-enthusiasts