A very good looking case.
It comes with two front 140mm led intakes.
The front is filtered.
I really think that is all you will need.
It comes with a rear 140mm fan and that is all you need also.
One can always change out fans later if more cooling is necessary.
If you ever need more airflow, the way to do it is to replace the two front fans with higher rpm versions.
Most of the time the fans will have 3 pin headers that you can plug into the motherboard if you want motherboard control of speed.
Sometimes the leads also have a 4 pin molex option that will always run at full speed.
140mm fans move a lot of air at relatively low rpm which will be quiet.
You will know when you install your parts in the case.
NH-D15 is as good as it gets for an air cooler. It will fit, you have plenty of headroom.
I might suggest that the NH-D15s would be an equally effective cooler with better compatibility for clearing tall ram and graphics cards.
Here is a link to the differences:
https://noctua.at/en/tdp-guide
As perhaps a first time builder, here is my build process:
MY build process:
Before anything, while waiting for your parts to be delivered, download
and read, cover to cover your case and motherboard manual.
Buy a #2 magnetic tip philips screwdriver.
I find it handy to buy a power switch like this for testing.
https://www.ebay.com/p/4in1-PC-Power-Reset-Switch-HDD-Motherboar-LED-Cable-Light-Wire-Kit-for-Computer/631889283?iid=142232821294&chn=ps
1. I assemble the critical parts outside of the case.
That lets me test them for functionality easily.
A wood table or cardboard is fine.
2. Plug in only the necessary parts at first. Ram, cpu, cooler, psu.
Do not force anything. Parts fit only one way.
Attach a monitor to the integrated motherboard adapter if you have one, otherwise to the graphics card.
3. If your motherboard does not have a PWR button, momentarily touch the two pwr front panel pins with a flat blade screwdriver.
4. Repeatedly hit F2 or DEL, and that should get you into the bios display.
5. Boot from a cd or usb stick with memtest86 on it. memtest will exercise your ram and cpu functionality.
6. Install windows.
7. Install the motherboard cd drivers. Particularly the lan drivers so you can access the internet.
Do not select the easy install option, or you will get a bunch of utilities and trialware that you don't want. Drivers only.
7. Connect to the internet and install an antivirus program. Microsoft security essentials is free, easy, and unobtrusive.
8. Install your graphics card and driver if you tested with integrated graphics.
You will need to remove the graphics card later to install your motherboard in the case.
As a tip when screwing the motherboard into the posts, give the screw a small counterclockwise turn until you feel a click.
That lets you know that the screw will engage properly.
Make a note of how the graphics card latches into the pcie slot.
The mechanism will be hidden under the card and may be difficult to work if you have not previously checked how.
9. Update windows to currency.
10. Only now do I take apart what I need to and install it in the case.
11. Now is the time to reinstall your graphics card.