Is Smith & Wesson Bringing Back the Stainless Wondernine?
Was it a social media girl’s fever dream, or is Smith & Wesson teasing that perhaps its best “Wonderine” pistol may be ready for a comeback?
The company, on Thursday, dropped this across all its social media platforms:

The response was fierce, with more than 2,300 comments on the Facebook post alone.
“I am *begging* you guys to bring the third-gen Smiths back. Don’t let this just be a “hey wouldn’t it be cool if…'” said one respondent.
“Do not play with my emotions,” said another.
“Listen…. Don’t play games with our feelings if you’re not going to do it…” said a third.
Why all this excitement for a gun that was replaced in the catalog by the polymer-framed M&P9 over 20 years ago?
The S&W 5906, produced from 1989 through 1999 in its standard model and until 2004 in its railed TSW variant, was a well-liked double-stack DA/SA 9mm with a stainless-steel frame and slide. An alloy-framed half-brother, the S&W 5903, had a similar run.
The 5906 was the peak of S&W’s Wondernine evolution, benefiting from over 75 years of development of the platform as well as the feedback (and warranty returns) from thousands of users going back to the old Model 39 and the Army’s circa 1948-1954 X100 pistol program.
In other words, it was about as perfect as Smith could make it for a duty-grade all-stainless DA/SA double-stack 9mm. They are balanced, dependable, and shoot well, making them a good companion to similar all-metal hammer-fired guns of the era, such as the CZ 75, Beretta 92, and SIG P226 – but all American.
Please, S&W, mess around with our feelings here. Bring back the 5906. Maybe even with an optics-ready option. Get on that. SHOT ’26 is only eight months away.


