OP, 22rf rifles and ammo can be very fussy when combined, depending on all sorts of factors.
I'm down to a couple of 22rf rifles now, not including the 22wrf and 22wrfm. Both of the 22LR chambered rifles will reliably chamber and ignite every brand of ammo I've put through them, including a brick of CIL LR Whiz Bangs, which was at least 60 years old.
With these two rifles, if there is an FTF, I feel confident it's the ammo, not the rifle.
This is a big issue for many folks.
22rf rifles, just like their center fire counterparts are built for specific venues of shooting and the ammo should match the venues the rifles are designed for.
If you've got a rifle designed for match shooting or even long-range gopher shooting, then you need to find the brand of ammunition your rifle prefers for accuracy, which will usually be the most reliable with ignition.
You have to have consistent ignition qualities, combined with propellant and good bullets in a rim fire rifle, just like you do with a centerfire rifle, to get good accuracy.
Very accurate rim fire rifles, depending on their design, will have all sorts of variables which will have an effect on how reliable your chosen ammunition is in that rifle.
I'm going to ignore the trigger right now and the recoil/return springs on semi auto rifles, but hammer and striker springs can make a huge difference on the way rimfire ammunition will reliably ignite.
The manufacturers have to find a way to keep costs as low as possible, so the materials used to make the cases will change as will the thickness of the materials. Some manufacturers use brass, mild steel, or aluminum and the hardness of these materials differs a lot, not to mention the blends of the metals.
Then, there is the condition of the striker springs themselves in any given rifle. Springs do deteriorate with repeated use over time.
Many old Marlin, Cooey, Winchester, Remington bolt action 22rf rifles, to name a few, have all sorts of ignition issues, no matter how good the ammo is. The striker springs need replacing or the bolt, which is usually the recoil lug, will have wear and the seat it rests on will be worn, which doesn't allow the firing pin to travel far enough to ignite the priming compound reliably.
The list goes on and on as to why 22rf rifles/ammo conflict with each other.
I was just looking at a Ruger 10/22 which was having issues with failures to fire and hang fires with several brands of ammo it had previously worked very well with.
This rifle had been worked hard and put away wet with close to 100,000 rounds down the tube, which was also worn. The aluminum receiver had zero finish left, and the internals were all sloppy, but, the only reason it was having issues with FTF was the hammer spring had become weak.
OP, if you're financially constrained or it just goes against your grain to purchase the specific ammo your rifle prefers, then you may run into issues which just about any brand of ammo you purchase at the sale prices given by the LGS or Big Box store.
Especially if you have a rifle that's not built to handle this type of ammo.
I'm not a great fan of the Ruger 10/22 rf design, but I will admit, the standard grade, off the shelf Ruger 10/22 will reliably feed and digest just about any brand of 22lr rf offered in Canada.
I've seen those rifles shoot ammo without a hiccup, all covered in verdigris and lint, as well as shooting acceptably close to point of aim, more often than I can count.