I have heard of people not liking striker fired pistols. What is it you do not like about them GF? Only complaint I have is the take up feels "mushy" vs a da/sa gun. Have you ever looked at a sig 2022? Very crisp trigger at a affordable price.
I own a SIG SP2022 in 9mm and love it. In fact it sits in my nightstand and is one of my favorite pistols. I'm a SIG fan and have always preferred the SIG decocker system. I used to own a P226 and sold it some years ago because it was just too heavy a pistol, and regretted selling it. When the Sig Pro 2340 came along I was a bit hesitant, but it eventually morphed into the SP2022 and I was sold. It's been my home defense pistol for many years, and I train with it regularly.
Striker fired is not my choice because of the way the trigger feels and the safety issues. I was raised on revolvers and prefer a double action hammer fired pistol -- in fact I'm most accurate and adept with the DAO P250 because it has the cleanest/crisp double action pull of any firearm I've ever owned -- bar none. Strikers don't even come close.
Strikers with their low trigger pull weight and without a manual safety are in my opinion (my personal bias) an accident waiting to happen. Unless someone is absolutely trained to the max on strikers and instinctively keeps the index finger off the trigger, then they're OK. However, I've seen enough negligent discharges with Glocks and SDs that I do not recommend them for the average person looking for a home defense pistol. In a high stress situation many highly trained civilians, LEOs, and para-military personnel have shot themselves (or others) by accident "resting" their finger on that trigger. Good training and muscle memory went out the window when the adrenaline was pumping -- just look up the term "Glock Leg" and you'll get a lot of hits (metaphorically speaking --- LOL)
Back when I was a pup, we carried single action Hi-Powers and 1911s "cocked and locked" with the safety always on because the trigger pull was so light. These days we have strikers with about the same pull and are told not to worry about manual safeties because the gun has a secondary trigger safety. I just don't buy it -- and have seen the results in person.
Therefore, I carry appendix IWB and will only trust my gonads and femoral artery to a heavy 9-10lb DA first pull pistol (or a DA revolver). Personal preference, and many will argue the point, but at my age it's just experience and training that has formed these opinions. I've trained many CCW students who use and carry strikers successfully and I don't preach or try to influence their decisions. I just give them my own opinion and leave it at that.