WizaRd wroteI appreciate your replies.
Well I ended up buying the following from another dealer:
Intel i5 2500K
MSI Z77A-G43
Inno3D NVIDIA GeForce GTX560 2048MB
Corsair 8GB (2x 4GB) RAM DDR3
Western Digital 1TB HDD SATA3
Samsung 24xDVD-Writer
Coolermaster 450W PSU
The reason I bought a fully built PC and not part by part is that, surprisingly... it was ~100,000L.L cheaper!
Those specs are so obsolete.
Get these specs:
Intel Core i5 3570k (Has 22nm Technology, PCIE 3.0 , supports memory up to 1600MHz while the old one supports only 1333Mhz)
If you get the 2500K lots of features will be disabled on your motherboard since it's a Z77 chipset.
For the graphics card don't get a 500 series GPU because newer GPU-s are significantly faster than the old models. New games will take advantage of those speeds making them more demanding.
So if you get the 560 you will game a few months until newer games get released(Which will demand more GPU power).
If you can't get the 670 , get a 7870 or 7850.
You can always wait for the 660Ti release (Which I recommend)
The rams are fine.
The HDD is fine too
if it's not a Caviar Green series.
DVDRW looks good (You can always get a Blue-Ray combo drive)
The power supply is VERY VERY VERY week. The first rule when building a gaming PC is not to go cheap on the PSU. Get at least 650W. I'd recommend going with XFX , Antec or Corsair.
Your system will not run with a 450W PSU
If you can't find the exact same specs try to find the most equivalent.
Good luck :)