@Ramy58
CPU : i7-4790 $309.00 (no need of overclocking) - OK
You did not mention the Mother Board: Asus Z97-K is Great for about USD 190 including VAT
GPU : MSI GTX 980 Gaming 4G GeForce GTX 980 4GB GDDR5 $649.00 (no amd or double-gpu, not the best for gaming in my experience) - OK - Stick with NVidia (Better Optimized for Games / Less Heat / Less Power Consumption) - An alternative is : MSI GTX 970 OC is Great for 1080p/1440p Gaming (Very High / High Settings) and 2160p (4K) Medium Setting.
RAM :2x Kingston HyperX Fury White(or red or blue I don't know what to pick) Series 4GB 240-Pin DDR3 1600 Desktop Memory Model HX316C10FW/4 for $36.00 x 2 = 72$ - OK but I prefer 16 GB - 8 GB by 8GB
CASE :Cooler Master SCOUT 2 Black SGC-2100-KWN2 Mid Tower ATX w/ Window (is there a need for better than that ?) $109.00 - Yes that will have the job done + add some extra fan (12cm for 15 USD) - Thermaltake Chaser A21 mid for USD 80 will do the Job too with a side Graphic Card Fan (12 cm) you can add.
HDD : 2TB ST2000DM001 7200RPM SATA III 64MB $86.00 (OK)
SSD : Kingston HyperX 3K SH103S3/120G 2.5" 120GB SATA III MLC Internal Solid $88 (OK) - Kingston HyperX 3K SH103S3/240G 2.5" 240GB SATA III MLC Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) for 140 Including VAT is more convenient (OS on It and some AA titles Games)
DVD-WRITER : Pioneer BDR-209DBK 16X DVDRW Blu-ray SATA (he really wants blu-ray) $86 (OK)
Microsoft Windows 8.1 64-Bit Edition $106.00 (is professional important) - No you can go with home edition - PRO is important for networking ; but not that much difference in price between Home & Pro
I still need to know what psu to take but I frankly don't know what's best. For the PSU go with the Thermaltake Tough Series 80 Plus Gold - Fully Modular
Not All Thermaltake PSU are not Reliable ; the Tough power series has proved it self to be very reliable and efficient to be used at high end systems:
http://www.overclock.net/t/183810/faq-r … r-supplies (The list is mostly comprised of high availability units offered by global brands)
Reviews:
http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/Ther … r_DPS-850/
http://www.tomshardware.com/answers/id- … upply.html
http://www.hardocp.com/article/2009/09/ … WWWMnmJiUk
http://www.geeks3d.com/20110527/thermal … su-review/
http://www.overclockersclub.com/reviews … h_xt_850w/
Also, Corsair makes a Tier 3 PUSs (not solid) like the CS Series:
http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/forum/id- … -list.html -The Most Update PUS Units Tier List
A note about the case:
Thermaltake or Corsair or Cooler Master - to me what matters how to mount the internal fans (exhaust/inxaust) of air flow that what matters for airflow/dust - also read many reviews about that where some Corsair cases have bad ventilation - I go with my custom way with any brand of the three.
For the Monitor go with the: LG 24MP56HQ Wide 23.8" LED IPS Full HD / Wide Viewing Angle for USD 185 (including VAT) very good 1080p IPS monitor and affordable - surely you can upgrade to the ROG SWIFT PG278Q as 1440p/144Hz/GSync Monitor but too expensive (at least for now) stick with an affordable good monitor as the mentioned above.
For the peripherals go with the A4Tech Bloody Series - Bloody Gaming Keyboard B120 (
http://www.macrotronics.net/product_info.php/bloody-gaming-keyboard-b120-p-7253) and Bloody Gaming Mouse ZL5 (
http://www.macrotronics.net/product_info.php/bloody-gaming-mouse-zl5-p-6789) - Very Affordable with good gaming qualities and functionalities that match much more expensive Gaming Keyboards & Mouse
For the CPU Cooler: Go with the Thermaltake Contact 21 for USD 28 very silent and more efficient compared to the Intel Stock Fan - with an affordable price.
Depending on your Preference and if you are interested in the final two peripherals :
A good sound system if you need any go with the MicroLab - Bluetooth M 200 Platinum Speakers (
http://microlab.com/?r=21systemen&st=full&id=682 for about USD 70
MS Xbox 360 Wireless Controller for Windows for USD 60