Demo

The CZ Shadow 2 Carry brings the heart of a match gun to an EDC-sized package. It keeps the ergonomics and shootability that made the Shadow line a favorite, then trims the footprint to Glock-19 territory and adds a drop-safe, decocker-equipped SA/DA system that makes sense for concealment.

Watch the Video Below

What It Is and Who It’s For

Think Shadow feel in a lighter, shorter pistol built for real-world use. If you admired the original Shadow 2 for its trigger, grip contour, and return-to-target manners, this version gives you that same confidence in a carryable format. It is not a USPSA race gun. It is built for concealed carry, duty, and defensive practice by shooters who value metal frames and tuned ergonomics.

Size, Handling, and Ergonomics

Dimensionally, the Shadow 2 Carry sits in the compact sweet spot. Height, length, and grip circumference land near a Glock 19 profile, with a full firing grip for most hands. The forged aluminum frame keeps weight manageable while keeping that stable, planted feel on the shot. The undercut trigger guard and high beavertail let you ride high without slide bite.

CZ’s inside-the-frame slide rails remain. The slide rides lower within the frame, and although the top of the slide sits visually higher above the web of the hand than many striker pistols, it carries less reciprocating mass than a typical full-height slide. On the range that translated to fast, flat tracking and easy dot or front-sight recovery. Front and rear cocking serrations are sharp enough to matter without shredding hands.

The controls are well executed. The ambidextrous decocker is positive. The slide stop is shaped differently than earlier Shadows and is easy to use without nudging it by accident. The optics-ready cut keeps the rear sight in place so that you can mount any RMSc-compatible red dot directly to the slide. Depending on what dot you choose, you can still co-witness irons

Sights, Ejection Port, and Optics Readiness

Steel luminescent front and rear sights ship on the gun. The rear has a ledge you can rack on. I also liked the ejection port geometry. With an optic mounted, the port shape threw far less oil and fouling onto the glass than some pistols that vent straight up. If you plan to run a dot, that small detail pays dividends during high-round-count practice.

Trigger System and Safety

This is a traditional double-action, single-action pistol with a decocker. The Carry adds a firing pin block, which brings true drop safety to the Shadow family. I misspoke in the video and stated that this is the first CZ that is drop safe when I meant that it was the first Shadow. In DA you get a long, smooth pull for the first shot. After that you run a concise SA with a short reset. The decocker drops the hammer to a safe intercept position for carry.

My sample measured heavier than 10 pounds in DA (Double Action) on a Lyman gauge (the gauge maxes out at 10lbs), yet felt smooth enough that I could keep the sights steady through the stroke. Single-action averaged just under five pounds across repeated pulls, commonly reading between 4.6 and 4.9 pounds. You can stage it if you want to, but it breaks cleanly enough that a straight press works best. It should be noted that the single-action trigger pull on my model is heavier than what CZ advertises in their specs.

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A quirk worth noting. On my pistol, the decocker would not actuate with the magazine removed. The gun still fired without a magazine in place, so this is not a mag disconnect. It simply means if you clear the pistol by removing the mag first, then racking the slide, you cannot decock with the mag out. That does not change safe clearing procedures. I just thought it was weird.

Accuracy and Reliability

This platform shoots. The inside-rail, hammer forged barrel, and tight slide-to-frame fit deliver accuracy that feels more like a tuned competition gun than a mass-market carry gun. With handloaded 147-grain ammo, I printed a ragged one-hole group from a rest with iron sights. Factory 115-grain ball from Herter’s ran fine. Federal Gold Dot and Nosler-branded HST defensive loads also grouped well. The pistol showed a clear preference for the 147s, but nothing shot poorly.

Across many mags I experienced no feed or ejection failures. Early in testing, I had a single odd event from a rest where the hammer fell without a bang. I suspect shooter input to the controls while on the rest, not a mechanical issue. Subsequent shooting has been clean. Ejection was strong and consistent, and the gun stayed flat through controlled pairs and five-shot strings.

Recoil and Shootability

At 30.7 ounces with an empty mag, the Shadow 2 Carry has real mass for a compact. That weight, the bore axis, and the lighter reciprocating slide combine to soak recoil, so you spend more time seeing sights and less time herding the gun back onto target. The SA reset is short, and I didn’t even notice it. Controlled cadence shooting at 7 to 15 yards felt natural. Pushing the pace to 20 to 25 yards on steel confirmed the practical accuracy you expect from a Shadow.

Build, Finish, and Kit

Fit and finish are excellent. The black anodized grips and black slide frame a clean, purposeful look. The forged aluminum frame shows no burrs or tool marks. It ships optics-ready, with luminescent steel sights, a full length accessory rail, and two 15-round magazines with witness holes. The included nylon case is better than average. You also get a cleaning rod and manual.

Carry Use

This gun feels built for real carry. The DA first shot gives a margin of safety for appendix or duty-grade holsters when you train properly and is smooth enough not to be a guaranteed wasted shot. The decocker helps you get there without gymnastics. The frame rail lets you mount a compact WML and there are lots of good options that would likely not extend past the muzzle. The grip texturing and contouring lock the gun in the hand and the overall size of the Carry is going to let most people carrry concealed without printing under a cover garment.

If you want a thin subcompact, this is not it. If you want a compact that carries like a service pistol and shoots like a match gun, this is the lane. I would carry it without hesitation.

Technical Specifications

  • Caliber: 9×19
  • Magazine capacity: 15
  • Safety features: Safety notch on hammer, Decocker, Firing pin block
  • Grips: Duralumin
  • Frame material: Forged aluminum alloy
  • Trigger reset: 0.2–0.3 in
  • Trigger travel: SA 0.4 in, DA 0.6 in
  • Trigger pull: SA 4.7 lb, DA 11.9 lb
  • Trigger type: SA/DA
  • Thread: No
  • Sights: Luminescent
  • Barrel length: 4 in
  • Height: 5.4 in
  • Width: 1.5 in
  • Length: 7.5 in
  • Weight (empty mag): 30.7 oz

Price and Value

Street prices look to settle near the thirteen-hundred mark. That pits the Shadow 2 Carry against high-end polymer compacts and many metal-frame DA/SA offerings, and even some of the newer 2011s. You pay more than an entry-level striker pistol, but you get a forged-frame gun with tuned ergonomics, OR capability, and true Shadow lineage. If you value how a gun shoots and handles more than chasing the lowest price, the price tracks the performance.

The Bottom Line

The Shadow 2 Carry takes proven CZ geometry and delivers it in a compact you can live with every day. It balances speed, control, and accuracy, then layers on the features that matter for defensive use: decocker, firing pin block, steel sights, and optics readiness. The trigger is heavier than the gamer Shadows in both feel and numbers, but it remains smooth, predictable, and effective. The pistol ran clean, shot flat, and made small groups with quality ammo. If your carry gun must shoot like your range gun, put this one on your shortlist.

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