^Yes sir! Handled one at the Cold Lake CT store. Proportions too large, blueing throughout versus park'ed. That foam in the butt stock looks cheap when some storage place (ammo?) could have filled that rather large and useless space. Should have a visible hammer too. Lots of sharp edges for a 12 gauge! (ouch)
meh....
PS: Many people don't realize that the sub gauge adapters are very range restricted & with a reputation of terrible accuracy at even 10-15 yards,& under good conditions.
IMO, the extra weight of numerous adapters should be replaced with a small fishing kit, extra rifle/shotgun ammo, flares or other valuable survival goodies.
The one thing that Crappa did right was use Shortlane 8" rifled adapters. You won't win any bull's eye competitions with them, but they're not that bad, actually. I did a whole "thing" with a .22 adapter a while back, customized a short-barreled 12 gauge to take a red dot, and tested a bunch of different ammo. I got better results than I thought I was going to.
The targets were at 25 yards, shooting off a bench with a front sandbag rest. No competition winners, for sure, but minute of squirrel out to 25 yards, which is good enough for survival protein.
This is actually what I'm using now as my backpack/survival rig. It's not bad, but I would prefer an M6 in .22 over .410
The M6 is lighter overall, more compact overall, the .22 barrel would undoubtedly be more accurate, and for survival shooting, a 12 gauge is a bit much - .410 is just a better choice for small game and ditch chickens. Also, you can carry more of it for less space and weight than 12 gauge.
The Shortlanes are also prone to rust. You have to keep it wrapped in an oil rag, otherwise corrosion sets in fast. As in, overnight in the humidity of the forest. Not to mention, with adapters, you have to decide what you're going to shoot in advance... No time to insert or withdraw the adapter on the fly.
There's just a whole raft of reasons why a simple, lightweight, reliable, rugged, .22 over .410 kicks butt for a packable survival gun. The current price of the M6's on the used market reflects no only the collector value, but the strong desire that a lot of people have for that solution.