Remington 760/7600 rifles use a box magazine. Ditto the Browning BPRs. "Spitzer" type projectiles aren't an issue with these.
The old Remington 141 had a spiral groove in its magazine tube specifically to offset the pointed noses of their 150 gr. .35 Remington loads.
With the advent of Hornady's LeveRevolution loaded ammo and (recently) component projectiles, it is now possible to use the more ballistically efficient spire-point bullets in virtually any of the most commonly encountered tubular magazine hunting rifles. To be fair, I have heard that some older Marlin LAs may require the installation of a new, revamped cartridge lifter for the best feed reliability with these loads. Not a biggie cost-wise, IMHO.
I'm a Geezer and a southpaw, so LAs and pumps (being the most "ambi-friendly" of my limited options at the time) were about the most practical "repeating" hunting rifles I could afford. At one time or another, I've owned at least one example of most of the more common makes and models out there.
There are a few CF pumps that I regret having let go of, most notably a nice older 760 in .30-06 and a Savage 170 in .35 Rem. that was astonishingly accurate and effective on whitetails in the timber.
Currently, I'm down to just a very few "never willingly part with" pumps: My beloved IMI Timberwolf .357, my LH Remington 870 Wingmaster, a somewhat battered old Remington 572 and two pre-Taurus Rossi M62s. I have several more LAs, but the Timberwolf and the .22 RF pumps see more range and "fun" time than most anything else I have.
FWIW, there's a very good article on this very subject by John Barsness in the October 2011 issue of "Guns" magazine entitled "No Handicap".