Check into a Beretta U22 Neos as well. I have thousands of rounds through one, and after the first couple hundred break-in rounds it's been flawless. Even the break-in period was nearly perfect, just needed to bump the slide forward when the occasional round wouldn't go into full battery. Any ammo, it doesn't care. Before I bought my Neos I had it narrowed down to the Neos or the Ruger 22/45. I read a ton of reviews on both, and what ultimately swayed me is how dead simple take-down and cleaning the Neos is. The Neos looks goofy, most people either love or hate the looks, but in my experience it's top notch for accuracy, reliability, and ease of take-down and cleaning. After owning one I'll always recommend it as a first .22 pistol. You can also get a carbine kit, allowing you to swap back and forth between pistol and carbine in just a couple minutes. I actually have 2 Neos pistols, a 4.5" barrel, a 6" barrel, and the carbine kit. Since barrels are quick and easy to swap (under a minute) and they have an integrated weaver rail, I leave a red-dot on my 6" barrel, a scope on the carbine barrel, and just open sights on my 4.5" barrel then mix and match whatever I feel like shooting at the time.
Downsides, the trigger is ok - not match grade, not bad, just ok. Not much in the way of aftermarket support. I prefer 3-dot style sights which isn't an option, but they do have a rainbow of colors for replacement sights.
As for your specific list - the only one I have is an SR22. It has a reputation for being reliable, eating any ammo, etc. With probably close to 1,000 rounds through mine it has not been as reliable as others. Jams, feeding issues, ejection issues. This is with almost exclusively cheap bulk ammo. Just this last weekend I took my son to the range and gave him the SR22, a box of 100 40gr plated round nose cci mini-mag and a box of 100 36gr hp cci mini-mag. Zero issues. It's a gun I really want to love, but so far I haven't. Based on what I've read from others, my gun is far more picky with more issues that most. The few others that report issues like mine report a long "picky about ammo" break-in period followed by eventual "eats anything" status. I'll keep shooting it and hope I can transition to bulk and maintain reliability. Take-down is as easy as it gets, flip down the take-down lever, push the slide back then off. 10 second process.
Not everyone will agree, but I include ease of take-down in my decision making process when considering new guns.