The currently manufactured Smiths don't interest me.
Likewise, nothing Smith has offered since about 1982 has been of interest to me. . . .
So, if I buy a Smith, it's used.
I own five modern S&W handguns, three of them purchased brand new.
My 638 has been "corrected," filling the lock hole with The Plug. I consider it a functional tool, but one that is essentially disposable.
I bought a S&W M&P22 Compact because I wanted a cheap .22 "trainer" pistol and I liked the Smith better than the Ruger SR22.
I also have a first generation 9mm Shield and it became my go-to CCW gun. I think S&W hit it out of the park on this one. No, it doesn't have the panache of a 3913 (I own one of those, too), but it serves its intended role extremely well. It also falls into the disposable category. If you ever got into a defensive shooting situation and the cops took your gun and locked it up in an evidence locker, you wouldn't shed a tear for the loss of the gun. As cheap as they are, there's almost no excuse not to have one.
I didn't buy them new, but I also have two modern Smiths. I bought a surplus, ex-cop gun M&P40 simply because it was $230 and I didn't own anything to shoot .40 S&W. I liked that gun well enough that when I saw some ex-cop M&P 9mm pistols for $280, I picked one up . . . just because . . .
The new guns will never have the character, charm or intrinsic value of the old all-metal guns, but they do have a place. They are something you use and carry as a tool . . . something that works, and is inexpensive to replace.