Compare PC Building Simulator - Razer Workshop (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Claudiu Kiss. Published by The Irregular Corporation. Released on 1/29/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Indie, Simulation.

Snap Razer-branded peripherals and components into your virtual builds. Niche DLC that adds cosmetic legitimacy to an already solid sim.

PC Building Simulator is exactly what it says on the box: a business and hands-on sim where you run a repair shop, diagnose failing machines, source parts, and assemble rigs from scratch using licensed real-world hardware. The Razer Workshop DLC layers a specific brand of green-lit, snake-logoed gear on top of that foundation, giving you access to Razer-branded components and peripherals to dress up your builds or satisfy workshop contracts that call for specific kit. If you already own the base game and you have a preference for that aesthetic, this is the DLC conversation you came here to have. From a systems perspective, the base game holds up surprisingly well. The component compatibility logic is genuinely educational - you will learn what a thermal paste application actually does to your CPU temps in-sim, why your chosen PSU wattage matters when you pile on a second GPU, and how to read POST codes when a build refuses to boot. The Razer Workshop content does not change any of those underlying mechanics. It is additive, not transformative. Think of it as a parts catalogue expansion rather than a feature update. Who is this for? Primarily two groups. First, Razer fans who want their virtual workshop to mirror their real-world peripheral collection. Second, completionists who want every licensed brand represented on their virtual shelf. If you are a newcomer deciding whether to start here, the answer is no - pick up the base game first and get comfortable with the repair loop and the upgrade tree before worrying about brand-specific DLC. The tutorial in the base game does a decent job of walking you through component slots and compatibility without overwhelming you, which is rarer than it should be in this genre. The honest critique is that this DLC offers almost no additional decision depth. There are no new mechanics, no new business systems, no additional campaign content. The 94 percent positive review score belongs to the base game ecosystem as a whole, and that number likely flatters individual DLC packs when viewed in isolation. Mod support in the base game community is active, with custom components and liveries available through workshop channels, which raises a fair question about whether paid brand DLC competes with free community content. For strategy-minded players who care about ROI on their software purchases, that tension is worth sitting with before clicking buy. That said, if the Razer aesthetic is your thing and you are already invested in the sim, the DLC does exactly what it promises without breaking anything. The builds look sharp, the branding is accurate, and it integrates cleanly into the existing workshop loop. Sometimes a small, focused content drop is precisely what it needs to be. Diego, Scout Team

PC Building Simulator - Razer Workshop (DLC)
IndieSimulation

PC Building Simulator - Razer Workshop (DLC)

Jan 29, 2019Claudiu KissThe Irregular Corporation
GamerScout Says

Snap Razer-branded peripherals and components into your virtual builds. Niche DLC that adds cosmetic legitimacy to an already solid sim.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About PC Building Simulator - Razer Workshop (DLC)

PC Building Simulator is exactly what it says on the box: a business and hands-on sim where you run a repair shop, diagnose failing machines, source parts, and assemble rigs from scratch using licensed real-world hardware. The Razer Workshop DLC layers a specific brand of green-lit, snake-logoed gear on top of that foundation, giving you access to Razer-branded components and peripherals to dress up your builds or satisfy workshop contracts that call for specific kit. If you already own the base game and you have a preference for that aesthetic, this is the DLC conversation you came here to have. From a systems perspective, the base game holds up surprisingly well. The component compatibility logic is genuinely educational - you will learn what a thermal paste application actually does to your CPU temps in-sim, why your chosen PSU wattage matters when you pile on a second GPU, and how to read POST codes when a build refuses to boot. The Razer Workshop content does not change any of those underlying mechanics. It is additive, not transformative. Think of it as a parts catalogue expansion rather than a feature update. Who is this for? Primarily two groups. First, Razer fans who want their virtual workshop to mirror their real-world peripheral collection. Second, completionists who want every licensed brand represented on their virtual shelf. If you are a newcomer deciding whether to start here, the answer is no - pick up the base game first and get comfortable with the repair loop and the upgrade tree before worrying about brand-specific DLC. The tutorial in the base game does a decent job of walking you through component slots and compatibility without overwhelming you, which is rarer than it should be in this genre. The honest critique is that this DLC offers almost no additional decision depth. There are no new mechanics, no new business systems, no additional campaign content. The 94 percent positive review score belongs to the base game ecosystem as a whole, and that number likely flatters individual DLC packs when viewed in isolation. Mod support in the base game community is active, with custom components and liveries available through workshop channels, which raises a fair question about whether paid brand DLC competes with free community content. For strategy-minded players who care about ROI on their software purchases, that tension is worth sitting with before clicking buy. That said, if the Razer aesthetic is your thing and you are already invested in the sim, the DLC does exactly what it promises without breaking anything. The builds look sharp, the branding is accurate, and it integrates cleanly into the existing workshop loop. Sometimes a small, focused content drop is precisely what it needs to be. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamBrand DLCWorkshop CosmeticsPC Hardware SimPeripheral CustomizationRepair LoopCompletionist Content

System Requirements

System requirements for PC Building Simulator - Razer Workshop (DLC) aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
94%(52,511)

Game Info

Developer
Claudiu Kiss
Publisher
The Irregular Corporation
Release Date
Jan 29, 2019

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

More from Claudiu Kiss