I never intend to sell my .375, so wear is not a great concern to me, and I admire the rifle for what it does, not how it looks. I had the rifle built taking into account the conditions it would face in the Hudson Bay lowlands. The color has worn off one side of the McMillan stock where it rides on my back, and the checkering is not as sharp as it was a couple of years ago. Although it is never abused, the rifle gets babied at home, not in the field.
A true blessing is that I can take off the scope and/or the ghost ring, pull the action out of the stock, wipe everything dry, put it back together, and the rifle shoots to point of aim with no change of zero. That is a real confidence builder. I've got better than $4K into this rifle, and I wouldn't for a minute consider risk packing an inexpensive rifle just to keep this one looking good. A piece of electrical tape across the muzzle keeps snow out of the barrel, it gets cleaned every 50 rounds, or whenever it is out in wet conditions. If it is going to be out in the cold for an extended period of time, I try not to bring it into the warm at the end of the day, but there are exceptions.