The trigger is very M&P-esque in form as well. I know some shooters that do that, I however do not contact the side of the frame with my thumb while shooting, so for me they serve no purpose. There are small patches of texture on the frame just above the trigger guard, presumably for resting your shooting hand thumb on. My only complaint is that the texture on the side does not extend further up the gun, but this is fairly typical of most handguns. The texturing on the sides of the grip and the front and back strap is aggressive, but not overly so. The magazine release is essentially the same as an M&P. Moving down to the frame, the slide release is sufficiently large and the three ridges stamped into the release engage the thumb well. I prefer a tactile chamber indicator, something I can feel without looking, but this works. The SDVE shares a loaded chamber indicator design with the M&P, essentially a hole between the barrel hood and the slide, allowing brass to be seen in the chamber when a round is loaded. ![]() One nice feature on the SDVE series of pistols is that the dovetails in the slide are the same as on the M&P series of pistols, so any sights that will fit an M&P will also fit on the SDVE. The front sight is steel and dovetailed into the slide, the rear sight is plastic, but beefy, and I suspect can handle a little more abuse than other manufacturer’s plastic sights. The lines of the gun are attractive, and the gun is comfortable in the hand. On initial inspection, I admit, I was impressed with the quality for a gun that retails under $350, and in some cases closer to the $300 mark. ![]() The gun comes with two stainless magazines and all the usual suspects (gun lock, manual, etc.).
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