Unless the OP was building his computer in the middle of a desert in the dry season, wearing wool socks on a plush carpet, and using a pair of birmans as shoulder pads, I'm not really inclined to blame ESD. I have personally found it extraordinarily difficult to produce any kind of problem out of it, and for
two components?
Whatever the case, ESD, bad package treatment by the store, a ****** PSU wrecking your parts, whatever, you should not build computers expecting parts to fail and trying to go to extraordinary measures like buying from a store to avoid it (keeping a metal folding chair next to you to discharge before starting work or buying a $7 anti-static device? Eh, sure?). I wouldn't even purchase an extended warranty.
Done properly, I would put the failure rate of a self-built machine over a prebuilt any day. You're doing the wiring, the seating, the handling of the components, vs some guy getting paid mediocre wages to run through all that as fast as he can. Besides, it RMAing a part by mail or driving it back to the store really less of an imposition than lugging a tower 3 hours, round trip?
Moreover, Goose's build probably
does achieve the kind of value over that rig that you assert would make it worth your while to accept the risk of wholly-improbable hardware failures. With the PSU on-hand you are saving almost $200 (get W10 Home and there's your 200). His 970 is probably better than Micro Center's, you can shop around for a better SSD than Micro Center is probably giving you (why not go 850 Evo?), you can hand pick case and fans for cooling and noise, etc. The worst you might make out is paying nearly as much for unambiguously better stuff (or you could go the other way, and actually land cheaper than Goose's build in all sorts of ways, by rethinking some of what Microcenter is selling you; he was just replicating their build).
I just cannot see how giving up the control to get the best parts to suit you, and get the best prices on them, ends up being a smart move. I think you're grossly underestimating the dollar value you can attach to that.
Edited by Catamount, 03 April 2016 - 02:33 PM.