@DownhillFromHere - may I ask where in the country you are located? I'm in Maryland and shot skeet tournaments for a long time, primarily in the Mid-Atlantic area. Perhaps we have met?
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I too was a shotgunner for decades, particularly American skeet competitor (note, I didn't say I was competitive...only that I competed a lot! haha) and I still do quail hunting in GA and some waterfowling here in MD where I live.
I remember a dinner with some friends of mine a few decades or so who where skeet shooters. I asked what it would cost me for a shotgun to shoot competitively and they all piped up with "a Krieghoff K-80 starts at $10K"!!!
I was gobsmacked and my reaction is that they were insane for spending that kind of money on two pipes soldered together (more or less haha) and went and bought a Browning Citori for...I think, maybe $800 at the time.
The Browning lasted a year and then I upgraded to a Beretta 682 which lasted 3-4 years and now there is both a K-80 and a Kolar in my safe. Sadly, I'm now too old (well, with too old with a degenerating back) to shoot skeet except for a few rounds of recreational skeet with friends. So, I decided to get into rifles and my thinking/actions were somewhat similar.
First I bought a Rem 700 5R SS in .308. I still have that gun, we bedded the action, had Joe Ducos put in a Loggerhead comb kit, put on a muzzle brake, and put a Jewell trigger in it, and I'm still VERY happy with that gun for eastern whitetail and for the range. I seemed to have gotten a pretty good Rem barrel, which seems to be a bit of a gamble these days with Remington.
Now, I don't consider this a "cheap" gun per se (list is about $1,250 I think, but can be had for about a grand, right?) but it is compared to some of the stuff we see posted here.
I doubt in my remaining life that I will ever be able to do the fairly extreme mountain and long range western hunting some of you guys excel at. I suppose that if I was in shape to do this and paid for trip/guide/ticket/etc, that I may very well invest in a custom, fairly light weight, highly accurate hunting rifle. But, I, personally, just don't have the need for that.
Then, during COVID lock down, I got bit by the long range bug...not that I'm a long range shooter, just that being a competent marksman from 600-1000 yds is my goal. So, I now have a custom action with a Proof SS barrel in 6.5 CM in a J Allen chassis with a Leupold Mk5 5-25 x 56 scope. Sort of like my buying a K-80 after scoffing at people who would pay that for a shotgun.
Did I need this gun in order to pursue my goal?....well, I probably could have gotten away a lot cheaper. But the gun challenges me to shoot better and that was really my goal. I'm very happy with this rifle but remember, I'm 68 and retired so this has been a very engaging hobby for me so far, exercises both my brain and body, and my only regret was not recognizing the fun and challenge in precision rifle shooting earlier when I might have been in physical shape to enter competitions, etc....which I am not really any more.
The only person who can answer the OP's question is the OP. Its his budget balanced against other needs and I certainly can't comment on that. And, only he really knows what are his desired goals and challenges. I think that the rifle selection optimally derives from there (budget notwithstanding).
Just my random thoughts as the fucking socialist state of Maryland and the communist county of Montgomery have us pretty well locked down. So, please excuse my random blather.