That's a pretty mighty list there, thanks for weeding it down to 4.
I'll start with the Domain (my ski of choice for next season) - Jib Rocker (means zero camber - so it's completely flat when put on the floor with no pressure applied, and has tip and tail early rise) will help keep you in control with presses and butters and prevent catching on rails (especially with surface switch-ups, those should be a breeze now), a pretty uniform medium stiffness, but that rocker will make buttering easy, but you'll have the stiffness for jumps. Should be pretty durable, K2 always makes pretty bomber skis (I have a pair of 06/07 silencers in my garage that I lend out to people who need them, they're base and edges are in amazing condition). Symmetrical shape and flex will cut down swing weight and make rail tricks and switch carving no problem. Cost - $450.
The Revival - Basically, its the Extreme with Jib Rocker. Non-symmetrical shape so the swing weight will be a bit more than the Domain, but this thing is a jump killer, carves excellently, and will take even the biggest jumps. Cost - $500
S4 - One of the most bomber skis on the market, on the stiffer side, no rocker, non-symmetrical, but lightweight, and poppy. Kills jumps and can handle their own on rails too. Cost - $550
Ledge - Soft, non-symmtrical, super high tip and tail (not rockered though), everyone seems to be all about these skis lately, but personally, I found them to be meh at best, and I think the only reason people are so into them is cause they're "cheap", which is actually pretty dumb, cause they're not really a progressive ski, they're a beginner to intermediate park ski (which is why they're cheap - they're what they call the "price point" ski, which is basically, this is the basic model designed to get people started, you get what you pay for). Cost - $400
I'm also going to add that you look into the THalls and LTEs, both are super bomb-proof, lightweight and fun to ski.