Notice, that this year, I used a .357 Magnum, and took two deer with two shots. My two kills with the .38 were incidental to a hunt. One, was I was retrieving a book my girlfriend left on the treestand, and the other was a day I was not hunting, but I can't turn down a source of sausage during season when offered. The LRN load was standard 755 fps, dead broadside, pass through. The deer with the 110 factory Remington SJHP was also dead broadside. Though this one did not exit, but killed the deer. Either time I wasn't actually "hunting" deer. But when you are checking your property during a 2 1/2 month gun season, you tend to be armed at all times in case the meat comes your way. Not many deer, or other animal, can withstand both lungs being deflated, regardless of bleeding. I don't recommend the .38 but if close enough to your target, a slow lead slug that just dredges through ain't a bad thing when you need meat. If you get both lungs then there is no problem. In Texas, it's not a legal issue. Any centerfire cartridge is legal. We are all hunters and have our own experiences. Personally, a .308 level cartridge in a 10-14" barrelled Contender, with a 10x scope, is not a handgun, it is a short barrelled rifle. Many see it different and that is great, and I respect that, because we are hunters. Nobody is right, and nobody is wrong. Just keep getting meat in the oven, and keep the barrells warm.......