technically, match / standard velocity type ammo is subsonic as it's below the speed of sound from muzzle to target. so anything under that 1080 / 1120ish print on the box is really subsonic as it never goes past the speed of sound (depending on extreme environmentals).
IMO a fine example of subsonic gimmic on the box is remington subsonics, through a chrony i've recorded the same FPS 10 feet from muzzle as wolf extra & match, yadda yadda.
the closest thing i've found that matches up with the print on the box is .22 mag, hornady 30gr.
the truely really slow / quiet stuff should have a specialty type branding on it including the CCI quiet, rem cbee, CCI cb, and the like that have a majorly reduced powder charge, or even no powder at all and relies on the priming agent to propel the bullet. the trueist of labeling is the aguila with super subsonic designation, which in my opinion is like a generic term that describes CCI quiet, rem cbee, CCI cb both in FPS and sound, getting below 700 fps 10 ft from the muzzle.
over the travel of the bullet, you'll have more stability from muzzle to target as there's no transonic stuff going on over any of the trip there. of course the slower stuff will drop more than HV, but generally be more consistant / accurate at any distance. the specialty type as mentioned above has it's drawbacks when launched at longer distances, but within 75 yards and depending on if your rifle likes them, work pretty good when trying to be discrete.
humidty - as far as FPS at the muzzle it isn't much of a concern to me, until i start getting out about 100 yards - then the "thicker" air starts to actually start showing up POI differences. but at around 100yards, just about everything starts messing around with rimfire ammo.
HV really only gets inconsistant if you are shooting it past the point of where it drops out of super sonic speed. in other words, if you are using velocitors, mini mags, or just plain ol' HV there shouldn't be all that bad of groups (again depending if your rifle likes them and bullet design) if you are staying within that distance of going transonic. keep in mind these types are also produced in a more "pump it off the line and out the door" bulk type manufacturing, where even lower grade match ammo gets at least a little more attention to detail and manufactering machinery calibration to at least "pump out" a little better quality product.
given the choice, i wouold and do stay with a standard or match velocity in the 700-1050 to help take out most of the variables over longer distances and temperature swings.