Absolutely love my Howa Mini-action lightweight. It's a number one barrel. It's light handy and accurate. It's MOA or occasionally better with Fiocchi loaded 50g or 55g vmax. It's a not as smooth as my Tikkas but just as functional. I paid $329 for the gun best money I've spent on a firearm. Except maybe the $349 for the wife's Howa 223 HB 1500. She regularly shoots quarter MOA groups at 100 with Fiocchi 69 grain or Hornady 68 grain HPBT. She outshoots me and my $800 Tikka T3X Varmint. I don't feel bad she outshoots lots of guys shooting handloads through much more expensive rigs. Got my son a #2 barrel Howa Hogue 308 for his first deer gun. It cost $349 and it's MOA or better out to 200 yards with box ammo. Buy a Howa with confidence. Clunky and chunky but boy do they shoot!
Back to scopes. I'm deep into spring powered air rifles. I have a slew of side focus and adjustable AO scopes on them and most of my powder burners. I understand parallax and focus. I'm getting away adjustables. Their depth of field narrows considerably when focused close, especially on high power. They never seem to be in focus when and where I need them when something suddenly appears. I've run into this with the Nikon SF on the Mini-action. Mostly because it was left on high power but have still missed opportunities while adjusting the parallax to bring things into focus. I'm finding less is more. The less shit to fuck with, the less shit to go wrong in a hunting type situation. On a bench under no duress AO and SF is fine. With my woods situation I could probably do fine leaving the AO or SF on 50. I'd rather not deal with the extra weight, cost and potential weakness.
I wonder if Leupolds rimfire 2-7x33 stand up to the 223? It has a more appropriate 60yd parallax.