Am I ready to purchase the parts for my PC?

TroyThornton

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Sep 2, 2014
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I'm am going to be building my first PC. It will mostly be used for heavy gaming, But also everyday use. I have listed all the parts I have chosen bellow, along with a link to them from PcPartPicker. My question is this:
Will the parts I have chosen, will they all be compatible and have no conflictions, Will they allow me to play all games on max settings with good fps?

PcPartPicker - http://pcpartpicker.com/p/MzHNsY

Case - CM Storm Scout 2 Advanced

Motheroard - Gigabyte GA-Z97X-GAMING 7 LGA 1150 Z97

CPU - Intel Core i5-4690K Processor 3.5 GHz LGA 1150 BX80646I54690K

Memory - G.SKILL Sniper Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1866

Graphics Card - EVGA GeForce GTX780 SuperClocked w/EVGA ACX Cooler 3GB GDDR5 384bit,

CPU Fan - Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO

Storage - WD Blue 1 TB Desktop Hard Drive

Optical Drive - Asus 24x DVD-RW Serial-ATA Internal OEM Optical Drive

Power Supply - EVGA SuperNOVA 750G1 750W ATX12V Power Supply

OS - Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 64bit

I know I have posted a lot of questions, and I am verry sorry, But as it is my first PC, I am worried and want to make sure I'm doing everything right for the right prics, this is also the only place I found with people who respond to questions well. This will most likely be my last question before I purchase the parts. So any and all advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
 
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I see nothing to wrong. I would get a much lower PSU and throw that money at a better CPU though :) your build only uses 447w so you can get away with a 500w instead get the 4790k? may cost a bit more but no doubt IMO worth it. Although that PSU is pretty darn cheap for what it is. So maybe keep it for future proof? Just some thoughts :) goodluck with the build!

Cvdasf

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Aug 15, 2014
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I see nothing to wrong. I would get a much lower PSU and throw that money at a better CPU though :) your build only uses 447w so you can get away with a 500w instead get the 4790k? may cost a bit more but no doubt IMO worth it. Although that PSU is pretty darn cheap for what it is. So maybe keep it for future proof? Just some thoughts :) goodluck with the build!
 
Solution