Here is something interesting that I stumbled on in my e-mail.
As far as red dot sights go, Meprolight marches to the beat of their own drum. Historically, they have been best known tritium iron sights and for passively powered reflex sights, like the original M21. Meprolight does squeeze pretty good performance out of a combination of fiber and tritium illumination. Still, reticle washout is not uncommon, so after testing all sorts of different Meprolight products, I ended up using one of them on my home defense gun (Q's Honebadger). The one I ended up choosing is the Mepro MOR Pro. https://alnk.to/8EKliDd
There are a few reasons I went with it. It is a large RDS, which I am typically not a fan of, but this one integrates some interesting functionality:
-in addition tritium and fiber collector, there is also LED illumination so reticle washout is not an issue
-there are two integrated lasers: red and IR. There are not super peppy, but for my purposes that is not an issue. I do not do much with NODs, but the IR laser is fine at 100 yards or so, which is more than I need on this gun. Since there is very limited railspace on this gun, I like that the lasers and the sight are integrated into the same package
-if you adjust windage or elevation, the red dot aiming point and the two lasers move together. That really simplifies set up.
This sight is bulky and relatively expensive. If you do not need the lasers, it is not all that compelling. Now, Meprolight looks to have finally released a sight that has the RDS redunduncy of the MOR Pro, but without the lasers, without the bulk and without the price tag.
At last SHOT Show, they introduced the new tritium and fiber M22, which looked like a solid improvement over the old M21. Now, there is also M22 Pro, that adds an LED source to tritium and fiber. https://alnk.to/6xLfwV2
Now, for a general disclaimer: I have not tested the M22 Pro, but given my experience with the MOR Pro and M22, I am cautiously optimistic about it.
One thing to remember is that the window has significant color cast, so if you are bothered by it, this may not be the best option. I do not especially care, so it works well for me.
I am partial to sights that work even when the battery is dead, but given the long run times of modern LEDs, I am not sure how huge of a concern that is.
MOR Pro runs off of two AA batteries, if you do not run the laser much, it will work for years on the same lithium batteries. The new M22 Pro runs on a 2032, but given that most of the time you do not need an LED, I am not concerned about battery life either. M22 has a more efficient fiber collector than MOR Pro, if memory serves me right.
Still, I like the redundancy and I am not bothered by window tint. These work well for me. YMMV