I hate to be the one to point this out, I really do but........ Sniping rifles are a specialized tool for the hunters of men, professional marksmen performing a function of combat.
Preparing for combat?
.
In order for anyone to give you a remotely intelligent answer you will need to establish A:What is your budget?
B:What are your exact intentions or hopeful uses for this rifle?
Now for your long range target or hunting scope:
Sunday afternoon target shooting? First or last light hunting?
Top end magnification can range from 10x to 36x or more, low end magnification depends on what your doing and how your doing it. If you want to see ground squirrels at 600 your going to want 20x or more to help pick them out of the terrain and center your point of aim. You'll need good qualty glass to use 20x effectively without glare and distortion.
If you want to retain the ability to easily shoot a running coyote or dear at 40 yards you'll want a low end around 3 or 4, you'll need to decide which is most important and plan accordingly.
If you plan on shooting paper targets or a calm elk grazing in the distance you do not need an extremely low end magnification or extremely high end magnification. You'll need to strike a balance.
BDC reticle for ball park targeting or turret adjustable high quality from a reputable manufacturer for precision adjustments? Again depends on what exactly you doing and how your doing it.
Parallax adjustable is a must if your magnification is over 10x especially..
Have a range finder or going to try and use your reticle for targets of known size? These all play a role in deciding what reticle you do or don't need.
Mounts can run the gambit and range from very cheap but good enough to "holy cow they cost as much as my gun". I generally recommend a one piece picatinny rail and matching rings in the appropriate hight depending on how big your scope is.
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