They are a decent little pistol. The .32 auto had some fans amongst the cowboys of 1905-1940 or so: the little pistols fit nicely in chaps pockets, and in a pinch it was a pistol after all. Back home, the Savage seems to have been a local favorite. (I've always thought it was the "10 shots quick" sales motto. Some of those old boys had been in enough shooting scrapes to expect to miss frequently, and ten shots without loading can be a comfort when you are carrying a pocket pistol.) I know they made them in .380, but the magazine only holds nine rounds.
They point well, very well if you figure out which model fits your hand best. For me, that is the original 1907, but a friend finds the later model of 1917 to suit his hands better. I've carried a 1907 some. It fits nicely in a hip pocket, or the pocket of a coat. Not the most accurate .32 I've ever shot (that would be the CZ70), but one of the best pointing pistols I've ever handled.
There are a couple of typical problems with them. Before doing anything else, get decent instructions on take-down! Finding spare magazines, or spare parts, can be a trial. I'd get a set of springs from Wolff. And the grips. . . hundred-year old gutta percha grips that "snap" into place are going to break. I'd get a set of repro grips before shooting it much.
They tend to like Winchester FMJs. Mine got almost 100 fps more with S&B FMJs, so that was what I carried in it. I'd love to have my old one back, and sooner or later will pick up another.