If you want a 22 that shoots out of the box try a Kk500
Yes...at $4-6K (or more). I think we're talking about a slightly different market here.
I bought the CZ 455 Varmint Precision Trainer for the specific purpose of shooting more regularly during the winter months as a training aid for F-TR. I could have had a custom .22lr built by the same company that builds my F-TR rifles...again, for between $4-5K. I could not bring myself to drop that kind of $$$ on a training rifle. So far, I have been satisfied with the performance of the 455 VPT. Because the VPT comes with a Manners T4 stock, the feel is relatively close to my F-TR rifles. At 50 yd, I have no trouble getting ~0.5" precision for 5-shot groups with 2 or 3 different types of ammunition (Eley Match, Lapua Center-X, Wolf-MT. Occasionally, groups have been in the 0.35" range, but the norm is about half an inch at 50 yd with the better ammunition types I have tried. At 100 yd, it has an occasional problem with vertical that I'm convinced is a bedding issue, because the vertical shifts happen, then stay that way for a number of shots, and they simply don't match the velocities I'm measuring. The QC on mine is generally "OK", although the factory bedding job isn't the greatest I've ever seen. However, for what it is, I am fully satisfied with the purchase.
The 455 is not a competition rifle by any stretch of the imagination. If someone buys it with that intent, they will most likely be sorely dissatisfied. That is not to say there may be some that routinely shoot much better than the ~ 0.5" at 50 yd number I gave above, but they would be the exception, rather than the rule. The precision can certainly be improved with an aftermarket trigger, new barrel, bedding job, striker (firing pin) work, etc. etc., etc. But in the end, you may spend a lot of $$$. In a worst-case scenario, you might potentially spend as much or more than it would have cost you to buy an
entry-level rimfire match rifle to begin with, and it still may not have the precision of a decent match rifle. That's simply not the market they were designed for. If you get a "good shooter", the 455 typically seems to group in the 0.5" range for 5-shot groups at 50 yd with preferred match ammunition. A "poor shooter" might group around the 1.0" range (or larger) for 5-shots at 50 yd. For many, 0.5" at 50 yd is sufficient precision for plinking, [fun] target shooting, critter eradication, etc.