Crosman Shockwave .22 break barrel with the thick/suppressor barrelHas the features I was looking for, and at the top of the price point I was willing to pay - $150, not $200-$350Pros-Open sights AND able to mount a scope, something I think all pellet rifles should include, bc if your scope breaks then what? No sights! See lots of rifles with scope only-Uses a nitrogen piston instead of spring so it's quieter & more accurate - they claim, and it is pretty quiet and accurate IMO- Shoots straight through tin cans of corn/potatoes! Or 2 foam archery targets back to back, and then sticks in the fence 5 yards behind the targets! The thing is powerful!- I'm assuming the wider barrel also supports some noise reduction, as I haven't read it anywhere - But either way, I really like it because smacking the barrel to open & charge the rifle doesn't hurt your hand over time like common skinny barrels do, since it's spread over a larger area. It's probably heavier, but worth the trade off I think.Cons- I would really have preferred the open sights to be metal, they're plastic. The front should be ok, and it doesn't appear to come off. The rear is removable, and it's the one I'd worry about breaking if it got hit from the side hard enough. Maybe I could find a metal replacement, but it seems sturdy enough for now- It would've been a nice touch to include sling points, although it would up the price, and I can probly rig something up so not a big deal- It's pretty hefty at like 7 or eight pounds? Also not a big deal tho, I got it for back yard plinking and pest control, not for taking hiking. But it's heavier than my step brother's youth single shot 20 gauge.-Will either try to make a case for it out of the box it came in by adding foam/duct tape, or break & buy a caseSighted in the "iron" sights first, then put the scope on & got it sighted in at about 15 yards as well - Making nice small groups now!Over all, very happy with this rifle, will hopefully get the opportunity to take out some fat rats with it!