Just because a 1-10 twist .25-05 shoots 115 grain Berger VLD bullets good enough for 600 yard F-Class use does not make that bullet an extremely good choice for long range use with a 1-10.
The 120 .257 Sierra GK or Game King bullet is designed for hunting game animals like deer and larger, for 1-10 twist. They have hollow points, relatively thick jackets thus do not expand well on small varmint creatures. These bullets have a relatively large meplat or big opening, thick jackets and are not intended for long range shooting like 1000 yards.
The Berger twist program provides a 1.32 SG for their .257 115 VLD with a 1-10 twist at sea level and 59 degrees F; they say this is "marginal" meaning that the while good groups may occur the B.C. will not be "optimized". Possibly under certain situations it might fail to meet expectations, like low temperatures. The minimum twist specified by Berger, the manufacturer of that bullet is 9.25.
Comparing 85, 100, and 115 Ballistic tip and 100 grain copper X bullets to the 115 Berger VLD does little. Nosler and Barnes need to sell bullets that provide good accuracy to 1000's of shooters owning 1-10 twist .257 type rifles.
Shoot4fun says his 115 bullets shot from a .25-06 failed miserably at 1,000 - no other data was provided like bullet type, length, or environmental conditions. Could I guess that the .25-06 had a 1-10 twist.
Berger.Fan222's .25-06 was used in 600 yard F class matches with the Berger 115 VLD having a Berger twist program derived SG of 1.32 with a 1-10 twist the same as Berger.Fan222's rifle. No other data was provided such as environmental conditions - altitude and temperature. Berger notes 1.32 as marginal - good groups possible but optimum BC not achieved.
I have heard that, the U.S. DOD, that acquires vast stores of ammo containing projectiles that might be used under every extreme condition from sub-zero sea level artic to blazing hot high desert conditions, has tested bullet stability for projectile/weapon use under these extreme conditions. This would ensure optimum results under all conditions. I have not verified this but I hear that the DOD has specified a SG of 1.5.
For my personal use when shooting targets or rodents at elevations greater than 4000 feet at 80 degrees plus or shooting coyotes near the ocean at below freezing I will select a twist rate and bullet combo that provides a SG of over 1.5 just like the Berger and possibly the DOD does.
Shoot4Fun should be commended for not shooting at game bigger than a prairie dog at 1,000. By "failure" I meant bullet stability and more importantly the use of "failure" was used in the context of SG as related to that particular bullet and twist rates.
The attached link provides some info
bisonballistics.com/articles/bullet-stability
Of note is the "up date 10/4/14" that might be refer to Berger SG of 1.5. When 600 and 1000 yard shooting is mentioned vs. 100 yard bench rest the value of faster twists to get to a SG of 1.5 or more is a consideration.