Where are you hunting, and how much do you actually plan on using them?
I just got back from a 7 day elk hunt, and I spent about 70 hours behind binos on that one hunt. Add to that, another 30+ hours on a 3 day pronghorn hunt in August. Plus, probably 100+ hours scouting. It was a slow year for me.
I have thousands of hours scouting and hunting behind binos. Buy the absolute best glass you can if you plan on using them. It is not just the appearance of clarity that is important. Color, crispness, ability to cut glare, edge to edge clarity, lack of fish eye, depth of field, and eye fatigue are all huge factors in how great binoculars differ from OK binoculars. If you can't glass for an hour without having a headache, pass on them. Save your dollars for another year, then buy the best you can afford.