Savage Arms just dropped a bombshell in the rimfire world by reimagining their legendary Model 110 platform as a .22LR bolt-action rifle series, ditching centerfire cartridges for the plinking perfection of rimfire. This isn’t some half-baked gimmick—it’s a full pivot, bringing the precision engineering, AccuTrigger adjustability, and heavy-barrel accuracy that made the centerfire 110 a hunter’s darling into the affordable, backyard-shredding realm of .22LR. Picture this: the same silky-smooth bolt throw, user-friendly features like the detachable magazine and threaded muzzle (ready for suppressors), now chambered in the do-it-all .22 that never misses a tin can or a squirrel’s vitals. Priced to move at around $400-$500 depending on the config, these rifles are poised to flood gun shops and become the gateway drug for a new generation of shooters.
Why does this matter for the 2A community? In a market flooded with budget ARs and polymer pistols, Savage is smartly tapping into the rimfire renaissance—a segment exploding thanks to ammo shortages making centerfire training a wallet-killer. Rimfire rifles like these are the ultimate 2A force multiplier: they’re inexpensive to shoot (hundreds of rounds for pennies), suppressor-friendly under the HPA push, and perfect for teaching newbies the fundamentals of marksmanship without the recoil or cost barriers. This move democratizes Savage’s premium bolt-action DNA, potentially pulling in youth shooters, competition plinkers, and small-game hunters who might otherwise stick to pump-actions or semi-autos. It’s a subtle nod to self-reliance too—stock up on .22LR now, and you’re prepped for when big-boy calibers get scarce again.
The implications ripple wider: expect Savage to dominate the NRL22 and precision rimfire circuits, where Model 110 ergonomics could outshine current rimfire stalwarts like CZ 457s or Tikka T1Xs. For 2A advocates, it’s a win against anti-gun narratives painting rifles as assault weapons—here’s a boltie .22 that’s as American as apple pie and varmint control. If Savage nails the quality (and their track record says they will), this series could redefine entry-level precision rifles, boosting training hours, family range days, and ultimately, a more skilled armed citizenry. Grab one before the rush; your trigger finger will thank you.