PC Building Simulator
A surprisingly deep PC hardware sandbox where you build, diagnose, and upgrade rigs, part puzzle game, part interactive tech encyclopedia.
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About PC Building Simulator
PC Building Simulator is exactly what it says on the tin: a simulation of assembling personal computers, from slotting RAM into a motherboard to cable-managing a full tower build. There is a career mode where you run a PC repair shop, taking in customer jobs that range from simple driver fixes and thermal paste reapplications to full custom builds with strict budget and compatibility constraints. There is also a free-build sandbox mode for when you just want to slap a threadripper into an overpriced case and see what happens. The simulation models real component compatibility, motherboard socket types, power supply wattage requirements, cooler TDP ratings, so this is genuinely educational if you are about to buy your first gaming rig and want to understand what fits where before spending real money. From a systems depth perspective, the game rewards the kind of thinking I normally apply to tech trees and resource chains. Each customer job in career mode is a small optimization puzzle: diagnose the fault through a simplified Windows desktop interface, source the cheapest compatible replacement part from an in-game store, and complete the job without blowing the client's budget or ignoring a hidden secondary fault. The diagnostic loop is repetitive by mid-career, I will not pretend otherwise, but the component catalogue is genuinely large, and the game tracks real-world GPU and CPU model names, meaning the knowledge you build here maps directly to real purchasing decisions. Where the game stumbles is in its late-career pacing. Job variety flattens out once you have mastered cable routing and compatibility checking, and the AI customers rarely push you toward anything creatively demanding. There is no real late-game equivalent of a grand-strategy crisis event forcing you to make a hard call under pressure. The career economy also gets toothless once your shop is established, money stops being a meaningful constraint, and the loop can feel like clicking through a checklist rather than solving problems. The tutorial is generous and patient, covering every cable type and port with on-screen callouts, so newcomers to PC hardware are well served from the first hour. Mod support via the Steam Workshop meaningfully extends the shelf life here. Community-made components, case mods, and even custom job scenarios keep the content pipeline moving well past what the base game offers. If you treat the base career as a roughly 20-30 hour structured course in PC hardware fundamentals, then let Workshop content push you toward builds the base game never imagined, the value proposition holds up. The 94% positive rating across over 52,000 Steam reviews is not an accident, this game genuinely fills a niche that nothing else occupies with the same level of part-level accuracy. It is the kind of simulation that appeals equally to hardware hobbyists who already know their PCIe lanes and to curious newcomers who just watched their first GPU unboxing video and want to understand what all the connectors actually do. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Claudiu Kiss
- Publisher
- The Irregular Corporation
- Release Date
- Jan 29, 2019