I like the Surly chainrings, though in my present setup, which requires a dished chainring to straighten the chainline, I can't use them. However, on the way to the Surly, I had a cheap steel ring and cranks (Amar, from India, supplied by a German dealer) fitted on a new bike as a placeholder until I decided which cranks with more class I wanted. Eventually it took me years to find cranks that weren't aesthetically repulsive, and at this point I fitted the Surly stainless ring.
I was hugely impressed with the service the steel ring gave.
Because of changes in other components, I had to take off the Surly and fit a dished steel ring (cost $9 in China...) to preserve the chainline and about 5K later I'm again very impressed: the ring is barely marked and looks like it will march on forever.
Both these steel rings are black. So, if black is aesthetically important to you, you can save some money and get a good steel ring. Or you can have the Surly blackened by the platers and anodisers in your town (use the yellow pages); when I turned old Bentleys into sports cars, I used to have stainless steel trim polished and then black-chromed for a lovely, permanent deep, deep shine without looking like hotrodder bling, and of course total corrosion resistance.