Canik's METE MC9 Prime was the kind of launch that tends to generate a follow-up question: what about a version without the comp? The West Palm Beach brand apparently heard that question loud and clear. The new METE MC9 Prime NC delivers the full Prime feature set in a traditional, non-compensated configuration, and if you've been waiting for exactly that, your wait is over. The MC9 Prime earned 2025 Concealed Carry Handgun of the Year honors on the back of a loaded spec sheet for the money: 17+1 capacity in a micro-compact frame, Night Fision tritium sights, an aluminum flat-face trigger with a 90-degree break, optics-ready slide, and that integrally compensated barrel and slide setup Canik calls an "integrated expansion chamber." The NC variant keeps every bit of that except the porting. Same grip texture, same deep serrations, same trigger, same sights, same Shield RMSc optic cut. Just a clean, traditional slide and barrel where the ports used to be. That's not a small thing for a meaningful slice of the carry market. Plenty of shooters prefer non-compensated pistols for a variety of reasons. Canik made the right call, leaving the entire Prime package intact and only changing the muzzle end, rather than stripping the gun back to a lesser configuration."The METE MC9 PRIME has been overwhelmingly well-received for its balance of size, capacity, and optics-ready capability," said CANiK Director of Marketing Jeff Rose. "With the new METE MC9 Prime NC, we're giving customers exactly what they've asked for - the same outstanding ergonomics, trigger, and sight package in a non-compensated version that maintains the lightweight, slim profile our customers love." At $649.99 MSRP with two 17-round magazines included, the Prime NC slots right at the same price point as the base Prime and maintains the value proposition that made the platform hard to ignore in the first place. The micro-compact carry segment is crowded and getting more so, but Canik has been operating at a quality level that punches above the price tag for several years running. I shot another model from Canik last week, in a timed event on the Texas star and some other steel target. I managed to place in the top 3, so they seem to work.Do you prefer a traditional slide profile over an integrated comp for everyday carry, or does the comp's recoil benefit outweigh the trade-offs for you?For more information, visit Canik.com.If this post has you ready to hit the range, head over to gunranges.com - a free directory to help you find shooting ranges near you, wherever you are in the United States.