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PGW Defence Technologies Direwolf
A Manitoba-engineered semi-auto .338 Lapua. RCMP classification was pending; SOR/2024-248 named it before civilian sales began.
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A Manitoba-engineered semi-auto .338 Lapua. RCMP classification was pending; SOR/2024-248 named it before civilian sales began.
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A Canadian-engineered, Canadian-manufactured rifle launched at TACCOM 2024 in Toronto. Eight months later, the OIC named it.
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The Index's first shotgun entry. A semi-auto bullpup whose Canadian-importer story is the case for tracking shotguns under the same methodology.
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A .22 LR rimfire designed to look like its centrefire military parent. The lineage is cosmetic. The regulation read the cosmetics anyway.
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Released to the Canadian market in 2023. Prohibited by the OIC the next year. The shortest commercial life of any rifle on the Index.
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Engineered to clear the FRT as Non-restricted in Canada. RCMP-approved 2017. Named by OIC 2024. The pathway worked the other way around.
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The most-visually-recognized PCC on the Canadian market. The Super V system was the design story; the silhouette was the regulatory one.
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The civilian sporting version of the G36 — designed to clear German firearms law, named anyway by Canadian SOR/2024-248. The lineage caught it.
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The civilian version of the rifle the IDF carries. The military lineage is the story. The regulation read it accordingly.
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Made in upstate New York, beloved in Canadian gun stores. The JRC was the modular PCC that Canada bought because the modularity worked.
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The civilian semi-auto descendant of the U.S. SOCOM Mk 16. Named exactly because of what it descends from. The lineage is the case.
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The folding-stock PCC that S&W built around its own M&P pistol magazines. Recognized at every Canadian range. Named in December 2024.