Crowellsr
One of the reasons I came into your thread is I that I often see comments such as "the highest priced scopes are the best and spend as much as you can". I really feel this is a disservice to people who, like yourself, are asking for good advise. I probably could have bought a nice house for all the money I have spend on scopes chasing the holly grail. What I have found is once you reach a certain grade of lens and coatings the extra price don't give you much, if anything, of value.
I have had most of the high priced ($3,000 - 6,000) scope fail and need to be returned to the factory for rebuild. There doesn't appear to be a brand of scope or model that is materially better than the other. In fact, the higher cost scopes seem to fail faster but that is just my impression. I have approached a number of manufacturer's engineering staff about this without getting a satisfactory answer.
The issue of seeing the mirage is a debate between shooters what is the most important feature you should look for. it is easier for most inexperienced shooters to conclude that clarity is that most important. I understand that because I followed that line of thinking for many, many years myself until I really understood what I needed. It took me 10 of 1,000's of match rounds on target to see things differently.
There are a number of approx. price points for high end scopes. $1,700, 2,400, 3,400, 4,500, 5,000 and over 6,000. Once you get over the basic $1,700 range you really don't gain much. Certainly you don't gain strength of construction from my experience as the cost goes up!
Things I look for are weight, zero stop, reasonable glass coatings, service reliability and turret click resistance. All are important to me but the most important is lack of point of aim shift as you adjust the turrets. Price is not considered.