Don't cheap out on glass for your free rifle. If it won't track or return to zero, or you can't see what you are looking at, it is a paperweight at best. If your "long range buddies" are shooting Vortex Crossfires.....well....
What do you consider "long range"? 400-600? A $500 scope is probably OK. But if you are turning turrets a lot, you need a proven track record scope. Clarity on target is not necessarily all you are looking at with good glass. It is seeing mirage waves, grass blades blowing, insects on the breeze @ 1000 yards, all to gauge wind, and therefore drift. What you can't see CAN hurt you.
Once you shoot 500, you will want to shoot 700, then 1000, then 1200, then 1500. It is addicting. Look through as many scopes as you can before dropping your coin on one. And not just at the local gun store. GO to the range. People who have never looked through a $1000 scope don't get it. And people who have never looked through and run a $2000 scope would never believe how much more you get when you step up. Yes, I am now a scope snob. But there ARE good scopes in the $500-1000 range. Buy used, and you can get $1000-1500+ quality in the same price range. Well worth it in my opinion.
I recently went shooting with a group of guys with a bunch of middle of the road ($500-1000) scopes. After shooting behind top tier glass, I could not ever go back. But when a couple of them looked through my scopes.....well....I think I burst their bubbles. So beware looking through true top tier glass. What you don't know, won't hurt you. Or haunt you.
Not saying a $350 scope is not sufficient for 90% of people. But when you get into true long range shooting, they are like taking a Geo Metro to a drag race. The $350 scopes of today are the $600 scopes of yesterday. And the $1000 scopes of today are like the $1500 scopes from 10 years ago. Glass has improved over the years. So save your pennies and buy the best glass you can. Even if that means waiting for a month or 6.