I've mentioned this before but because it comes from a reputable manufacturer, I believe it bears repeating.
The Smith & Wesson Bodyguard .380 auto. It seems like a 50/50 chance of getting one of the best pocket pistols ever, or getting something that will never work, shoot, load correctly, no matter how many times you send it in for repair. You be the judge. I've had friends that have owned one that worked great. But I've seen more than my fair share of issues.
1. Bought it. Took it to the range. Click, nothing. Tried extracting the round and I couldn't physically manipulate the slide with the round chambered. Took two of us, using leverage pressed against the table, to finally eject the round to find a light strike. Tried it again, couldn't remove again, and decided to pull the trigger until it went off. Took about 20 trigger pulls. Repeated this test to find this happen for every round. Couldn't fire more than 2 mags, the pistol just doesn't work.
2. Sent it in and got it back a month later. It fired on the first pull! So I decided to turn on the laser and plink some. After a few shots I realized the mag popped out a bit, I had to push it up and rack the slide every 2-3 rounds. The laser started to get dimmer and dimmer until I couldn't see it 2 feet in front of the pistol, and even then it was a 10 inch blurry circle. I started taking one-handed shots and after the second round fired, the mag fell to the ground. I did some testing and realized after every 2-3 rounds fired, the mag dropped free every time. Again, the pistol just doesn't work.
3. Sent it back in and got it about a month later. Despite myself and a local FFL working tirelessly to talk to someone to rectify the situation, we kept getting told to call back later. When I took it to the range for the third time and tried firing it, it worked fine and the mag didn't fall out. However, after 2-3 rounds fired, the gun would jam hard. Double-feed, stovepiping a live round, or a mag jam. Regardless, any of these required the mag to be removed to fix. At least now I could expect to fire 1-2 rounds reliably before the gun had a catastrophic malfunction.
4. Sending it back in again now. Gee, I wonder what will happen.