Building a Gaming PC Is Now Easier With NZXT's New BLD Kits

NZXT BLD Kits
(Image credit: NZXT)

If shopping for PC components is too complicated for you, NZXT might have your back. NZXT is introducing BLD kits to its store that will include all the parts necessary to build your own PC. This gives users an easy way to get into the world of DIY PC building without the worry or hassle of shopping for individual components. The BLD kits start at $1,399.

NZXT designs each BLD kit to be as user-friendly as possible. Each kit will come with all the necessary tools, hardware, and documentation to build a PC. There's also the bonus of full customer support and a 2-year warranty on all the parts, which is very similar to buying a pre-built desktop.

Currently, there are only two BLD kits available on NZXT's store, the Starter Pro BLD kit and the Streaming Plus BLD Kit. The Starter can be had for $1,399, meanwhile, the Streaming kit goes for $1,599.

Contrary to its name, the Starter BLD kit gives you a very solid foundation for your first PC and is by no means an entry-level build. For this kit, NZXT chose a Core i5 10400F processor, and an RTX 3060 Ti graphics card, which are some of the best CPUs and best GPUs you can find for a mid-range build. You will also get one of NZXT's H510 cases, 16GB of 3200MHz memory, a B560 motherboard, 550W Bronze PSU, and an MSI dual-band Wi-Fi card.

The Streamer Plus BLD kit kicks things up a little bit, by going with a faster Ryzen 5 5600X (which has made our list as one of the best gaming CPUs you can buy right now), a Kraken M22 liquid cooler, B550 ATX motherboard, and a 650W Bronze PSU. The rest of the components stay the same as the starter kit, including the RTX 3060 Ti, 16GB 3200MHz RAM, and 1TB SSD. Strangely, there is no WiFi card listed in the spec sheet, but we assume the motherboard comes with built-in WiFi to make up for this.

NZXT says the Streamer Plus build is aimed at new content creators who want to start streaming for the first time.

If you are interested in buying a BLD kit right now, NZXT is offering a limited-time sale right now, that will give you 10% off on all BLD kits, as well as other NZXT BLD products if you live in the United States. The offer will end tomorrow, October 20th at 11:59 PM.

Aaron Klotz
Freelance News Writer

Aaron Klotz is a freelance writer for Tom’s Hardware US, covering news topics related to computer hardware such as CPUs, and graphics cards.

  • jkflipflop98
    Cool idea. Gets people over the "the inside of a PC must be super complex!" line of thinking. After you build one with some hand holding you realize it's easy peasy to build a PC.
    Reply
  • Pytheus
    I like it. Something I can buy to have my kid learn to build her own PC.
    Reply
  • AnimeMania
    I would like to find a company that could build my PC with the parts I selected and make sure it is working properly. Building a PC isn't hard, but building a PC when one of the parts is defective, is excruciating and could be a nightmare finding out which part is defective and getting it replaced. That is the part that I would pay extra money to bypass. I think I would buy a new PC if it had all the parts that I want, worked (tested), but didn't have a video card in it. I already have a rather newish video card in my old computer that I could place in the new machine, until prices become more palatable to me to purchase something better. The two things I found worth upgrading on older machines are video cards and the addition of a SSD if you didn't already have one. Maybe RAM if you have less than 8 GB.
    Reply
  • gg83
    AnimeMania said:
    I would like to find a company that could build my PC with the parts I selected and make sure it is working properly. Building a PC isn't hard, but building a PC when one of the parts is defective, is excruciating and could be a nightmare finding out which part is defective and getting it replaced. That is the part that I would pay extra money to bypass. I think I would buy a new PC if it had all the parts that I want, worked (tested), but didn't have a video card in it. I already have a rather newish video card in my old computer that I could place in the new machine, until prices become more palatable to me to purchase something better. The two things I found worth upgrading on older machines are video cards and the addition of a SSD if you didn't already have one. Maybe RAM if you have less than 8 GB.
    Micro center has that I think, but you gotta go in person.
    Reply
  • husker
    In other words, NZXT is selling what amounts to prebuilt machines that just aren't put together yet, saving them a little money on assembly labor. Why not just go onto Tom's forums, name your price, and you will get 10 different build options with links to the parts you need to order.
    Reply
  • madmatt30
    husker said:
    In other words, NZXT is selling what amounts to prebuilt machines that just aren't put together yet, saving them a little money on assembly labor. Why not just go onto Tom's forums, name your price, and you will get 10 different build options with links to the parts you need to order.

    And every single one would likely come with a far better case choice than the nzxt h510 - apart from fairly clean aesthetics and build quality it doesn't have a single redeeming feature when it comes to actual performance.
    Reply
  • Why_Me
    Does it come with a mini fire extinguisher.
    Reply