If it makes you feel any better I've been shooting for a while and routinely shoot my M&P9c out to 50 yards. I've pegged many a squirrel in the head with either Ruger MKIII or a tuned pellet pistol. One time I got lucky and snagged a headshot on a walking coyote at 40 yards with my 4½" barreled 41 mag blackhawk.
Then I bought an LCP (before the Shield was out. It will probably be traded for a Shield this winter) . Anything beyond 7 yards was a pattern, not a group.
Fast forward 250 rounds when I had gotten the hang of the trigger and holding such an itty bitty gun properly and I could get out to about 15 yards with a decent group. Another 250 rounds lager and it tightened up a bit more. I did end up with some stronger Wolff recoil and main springs to reduce the felt recoil but I didn't do that til I was comfortable with the gun.
Subcompacts are tricky for anyone. Especially a new shooter. Go buy a bunch of ammo and save some money for a good hands on shooting class. Not one of the basic NRA classes (which are good for safety but usually only have you shoot 50 rounds) but one that has you run through 200+ rounds . While you're saving for the class read up on tips from well known competition shooters and use one of those diagnostic targets to practice on.
Tapatalk ate my spelling and grammar.
Then I bought an LCP (before the Shield was out. It will probably be traded for a Shield this winter) . Anything beyond 7 yards was a pattern, not a group.
Fast forward 250 rounds when I had gotten the hang of the trigger and holding such an itty bitty gun properly and I could get out to about 15 yards with a decent group. Another 250 rounds lager and it tightened up a bit more. I did end up with some stronger Wolff recoil and main springs to reduce the felt recoil but I didn't do that til I was comfortable with the gun.
Subcompacts are tricky for anyone. Especially a new shooter. Go buy a bunch of ammo and save some money for a good hands on shooting class. Not one of the basic NRA classes (which are good for safety but usually only have you shoot 50 rounds) but one that has you run through 200+ rounds . While you're saving for the class read up on tips from well known competition shooters and use one of those diagnostic targets to practice on.
Tapatalk ate my spelling and grammar.