Building Your First Gaming PC – Complete Beginner's Guide for 2026
Building Your First Gaming PC – Complete Beginner's Guide for 2026
Building your own PC is easier than you think. Follow our step-by-step guide to assemble a gaming rig that beats any pre-built at the same price.
Shop PC ComponentsGaming MonitorsWhy Build Your Own Gaming PC?
Building your own gaming PC gives you three major advantages: better performance per euro, full control over component quality, and easy future upgrades. In 2026, with GPU prices stabilising and DDR5 becoming the standard, there's never been a better time to build.
Step 1: Choose Your Budget Tier
Entry-Level Build (€600–800)
Perfect for 1080p gaming. Great for esports titles and older AAA games.
- CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 7600 or Intel Core i5-14400F
- GPU: NVIDIA RTX 4050 or AMD RX 8550
- RAM: 16GB DDR5-5600
- Storage: 1TB NVMe SSD
Mid-Range Build (€1000–1400)
Excellent 1440p performance. Runs modern AAA titles at High-Ultra settings.
- CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 8700X or Intel Core i7-14700K
- GPU: NVIDIA RTX 5060 Ti (12GB) or AMD RX 9070
- RAM: 32GB DDR5-6000
- Storage: 2TB NVMe SSD
High-End Build (€2000+)
4K gaming with ray tracing. Future-proof for the next 4–5 years.
- CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D or Intel Core i9-15900K
- GPU: NVIDIA RTX 5080 or AMD RX 9090 XT
- RAM: 32GB DDR5-6400 (expandable to 64GB)
- Storage: 2TB Gen5 NVMe SSD + 4TB SATA SSD
Step 2: Gather Your Tools
You only need: a Phillips-head screwdriver, a clean workspace with good lighting, and an anti-static wrist strap (optional but recommended). That's it.
Step 3: Assembly Walkthrough
- Install the CPU — Align the triangle marker and drop it gently into the socket. No force needed.
- Install RAM — Push firmly until the clips click. Use slots A2 and B2 for dual-channel.
- Mount the CPU cooler — Apply thermal paste (pea-sized dot) and secure the cooler.
- Install the motherboard in the case — Use the standoffs included with your case.
- Install the PSU — Route cables through the back panel for a clean build.
- Install the GPU — Remove PCIe slot covers, insert GPU, secure with screws.
- Connect storage — M.2 SSDs go directly on the motherboard.
- Connect all cables — 24-pin motherboard power, 8-pin CPU power, PCIe power for GPU.
- First boot — Install Windows or your OS of choice, then update drivers.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- ❌ Forgetting to enable XMP/EXPO in BIOS (your RAM runs at default speeds)
- ❌ Installing the I/O shield backwards
- ❌ Using too much thermal paste
- ❌ Connecting the monitor to the motherboard instead of the GPU
Frequently Asked Questions
Is building a PC cheaper than buying pre-built?
Yes, you typically save 15–25% compared to a pre-built with the same specs, and you get better-quality components.
How long does it take to build a PC?
Most first-time builders complete the hardware assembly in 2–3 hours. Add another hour for OS installation and driver updates.
What if something doesn't work?
Don't panic. Most issues are simple: loose cables, RAM not seated properly, or the PSU switch being off. We'll cover troubleshooting in a separate guide.