Winner
Diverse in Unity
VASIMR takes a lot less propellant.
At the cost of thrust. In the (paraphrased) words of the first speaker in the video I linked, if someone told you: "I'll give you a car that can drive a million kilometres per litre of fuel, but it will take you a week to get out of the parking lot", would you buy that car?

In most proposals for a piloted VASIMR ship to Mars I've seen, they ended up with space monstrosities with the overall mass of thousands of tonnes which can still deliver the same payload as a much lighter chemical or even lighter nuclear-thermal powered systems. In other words, totally impractical if the goal is to have a fast, fuel-efficient way of moving humans between Earth and Mars.
I can imagine a Mars cargo ship based on a viable combo of ultralight solar panels and electric propulsion. Such a ship would be hopefully reasonably reusable, use relatively little propellant and thus reduce the cost of supplying materials for a piloted Mars mission which would use more conventional means of propulsion. Since it would be automated and transporting only durable cargo, it wouldn't matter that it needed months to climb out of the Earth's gravity well and something over a year to get to Mars and insert itself into a reasonable orbit around it.
That's the kind of a job VASIMR can excel in, the others I've already listed. Thus, I am not anti-VASIMR, I just want people to understand the limitations and guard themselves against hype. Yes, it has a nice ISp and the thrust is better than in other electric propulsion systems, but there are very significant trade-offs

I haven't been keeping up with the SKYLON. That's the SSTO ramjet spaceplane, right?
It's neither ramjet or scramjet. They have a summary at the Reaction Engines Ltd. webpage.
As much as the purist in me wants to be skeptical, I must admit it's a tempting, almost brilliant idea.
Yup, definitely one of the most developed ones. It would definitely change the way we go to space, probably driving most medium-lift expendable launchers out of business.