Like most here, a Remington in 7mag for $300 is a great deal. I had one for years, back in the late '70s & early '80s. I loaded it up, down, and used it for everything from crows to Texas whitetail. It is one of the Premier long range deer rounds and with the right loads, poison on elk! If the recoil bothers you, have it mag na Ported. It's worthy of a high quality scope/good trigger job or replacement. Now, I've also had a standard 280 and a 280AI, both did what the 7mag did for what I was using it for. I enjoyed both ( got tired of forming brass for the 280AI though!) and the only mistake I made was rechambering the 280AI in a standard 22" barreled Mountain Rifle; I gained exactly 50fps with my favortoe load! I feel it needs at least a 24" bbl, and 26" is better. I also played with a couple 7mmSTW rifles, both were accurate,etc, did nothing the standard 7mag did'nt do "for what I used it for". Now, time marched on, those rifles are gone and I now have a little Kimber 84M in 7mm08, which does everything the 280/280AI in short bbl did for me; a 7mm RUM, which is much faster than my old 7mag, but in truth, no better in the field, but the rifle was a gift. I also picked up a half-sporterized Model '93 7mm Mauser out of nostagia. I only shoot factory 173gr S&B ammo out of it.
All this is to say to "start" with the original 7mag for $300. Scope it, trick it out, shoot it, handload for it, and learn. You may stay right there, you may discover you love experimenting and go on to other 7mms. Living in Utah, from prairies to 12,000ft Alpine mountains, a standard 7mag is as popular as the 30.06, for good reason. Good luck to you!