I would look at what your needs are, do you plan to shoot it alot, is accuracy paramount, how about appearance, is it a knock about for the barn, or a collector item. Go to the gun shows and hold up each and see how it feels to you if you are going to shoot it alot. Or, get several of the different kinds, shoot em for awhile, then trade them off.
I have owned quite a few of them, although no Swiss, or M-95's yet. The Mosins are priced right, ammo is cheap, they are accurate, the bolt handle is too short. The Mausers are nice, accurate, reliable, they tend to kick abit in 8 MM, ammo is cheap and available. The Swedish Mauser barrel heats up easily, stays hot too long (20 minutes once), but very accurate. Enfields are fun shooters, ammo is a cheap, accurate guns, the feeding is not as reliable on them as others. French MAS 36's stock is way too short. Jap rifles are strong and accurate, ammo is pricey unless you handload like I did for 15 years.
I have put on removable slipon pads on my Mosin and Yugo Mauser to lesson the recoil, good idea. I use black powder cleaner and Hoppes on the bores when using corrosive surplus ammo, easier cleanup when you handload or use commerical ammo.
If you are looking at a financial investment, concentrate on the European guns, Swiss, Swedish Mausers, German, and American Sringfields/Enfields, they are better finished, desirable, and will, down the road bring an easier sale and return on your monetary investment. The American guns have in my opinion been overpriced, but they do sell and keep increasing in value.