I always get a smile when someone says they don't like the way a gun points. In the 43 years I have been packing and shooting handguns, it seems to me that getting a gun to "point" is a matter of getting to know the gun. A DA S&W is different than a SA Ruger is different than a Colt 1911 is different than a Glock. Despite all that, if I spend enough time with any one of those guns, and don't screw with myself by jumping back and forth with different guns, I get pretty good with whatever gun I am learning/using. Beware the man with one gun, so the saying goes, as he probably knows how to use it. I believe that is the "answer" to guns that don't feel just right, most of the time. We get used to something else, and then another gun doesn't "fit" our hand, etc. Baloney! Once you find where the bullets impact, you adjust your stance/grip/angle, and learn. Keep doing it with whatever gun you have, and all of a sudden, the bullets start finding their home. True, some guns just fit, but most quality guns with sensible grips are made to fit most anyone, and are not out of whack enough to demand dumping them. I have a feeling that the BEST shooters have just ADOPTED a gun, and learned to handle it. Cooper, Munden, Miculek, Leatham, etc. And many of those guys can just pick up another type of gun, and STILL be good. That is what we all should be working on. Being good, or GREAT, with everything we handle. Not fussing about the way it "points".