Ok, let's see:
■ Investing in an SSD but then only going for a crappy entry-level processor does not help. An SSD for faster loading times is a piece of luxury hardware that should come at the very end. Loading a game faster that you cannot really play because your CPU is not up to the task won't help you. However, waiting 5 seconds longer for the game to load but then being able to play it properly is a solution.
■ Using two monitors for gaming requires a powerful graphics card. Buying 2 graphics cards is pointless, especially paired with a crappy CPU. Rather buy one graphics card. If you insist in doing SLI/Crossfire, there are cards out there with 2 GPUs on one card so you do intra-card SLI/Crossfire. Cheaper, more reliable, does not require a second PCI-E port. But you should definitely focus that money on the CPU first. And you should go for only 1 GPU as long as there are 1 GPU solutions that cover what you are willing to spend. 1 excellent GPU is better than 2 mid-range ones.
First of all, you need a decent CPU. You can always lower graphics details if your GPU (graphics card) is too weak for a game, but there is nothing you can do if your CPU is too weak for a game. The FX-6300 is a competitor for Intel's Core i3 class, which is definitely budget/entry level. For gaming, you need something decent. Go for a Core i5 instead, optimally the Core i5-4670. Ditch the SSD if that puts you in financial difficulties; you do not need one and can always add one later when you have additional money.
Also, ditch the second monitor for now and buy a decent graphics card with the money. Depending on your budget, you may settle with a Radeon R9 250 or get something more expensive if you can afford it.
I am sure that I am speaking for the whole forum when I say that if you want any additional advice, state your budget so we know how expensive things may become.
You may also pay attention to the fact that your list contains neither a CPU cooler (you don't want the stock one if you can help it), nor a case or PSU. You can save money on the PSU by buying a case that comes with PSU. These PSUs are typically not high-end quality but usually do.
Also remember that you will need some sort of Windows.