Furys are bonded. XTPs are not. That said, you can get velocities up pretty good on the fury bullets if needed to get the accuracy you want without having the bullets gernade or disintegrate on bone like an XTP that has a much lower operating velocity range might.
I've killed deer with my Kodiak .45 and 200 grain XTPs just fine but even at BH209 speeds [maybe 2200-2300 pfs] the bullets came apart. Last fall when I got my Fury 225 grain .40s cals I took a 50 gallon garbage can and filled it with folded, packed newspaper and filled it with water, let the paper take up the water they could then rolled it out on the range 100 yards and pinned a plastic plate on the exposed paper and shot one each of the fury 225 and a 200 xtp into it, one shot on either side of the plate to keep them apart. I used my Patriot for this using 56 grains of IMR4198. When I pulled the paper mass from the barrel by layers it became apparent that the XTP was in several pieces and had about 14" of penetration. That 225 grain Fury was in one nicely expanded piece with just under 22" of penetration. I decided right there that in the Patriot I was going to hunt with either a Barnes XPB or the Fury, hopefully both, but only managed one deer with the Patriot using a Barnes 195. I have several boxes of 200 grain XTPs and use them exclusively in the Kodiak to hunt and in the Patriot at the range.
I have shot .40 A-Frames in the Patriot at the same charge level and they hold together nicely. Very similar to the XTP, but bonding makes all the difference, so my advice is to stick with bonded or monolithic if you are referring to smokeless and possibly even when using T7 or Bh..