Hi Sam, welcome to RF.
Problem maybe that the wet foot test can't tell you if you pronate or not. So basically, if you're running in shoes designed to correct something in you which
doesn't need any correcting, you're going to get problems, I think.

Sorry I can't be any more optimistic or helpful. I'd just be very wary of using "corrective" running shoes.
I've made that rather expensive mistake in the past... buying shoes, and only later finding that they've been designed to correct something or other... too late when I've set off running in what felt to be comfortable shoes, but turned out to be devices of torture after about a mile. Never ran in those shoes again.
