will this work (first build)

Solution
Well the build looks alright. I'm assuming this build is primarily used for gaming, if so there are some tweaks that I'd consider:

* CPU - you could drop down to the i5 6500 and save some $ there.
* Mobo - Looks fine, assuming it has the options that you want (you won't be OC'ing the CPU with that board, but your CPU is locked so no big deal there)
* RAM - 8 gb's is generally all you need, but if you want 16 gb's then go for it.
* PSU - is a good and solid option to buy (Seasonics are good PSU's).
* GPU - GTX 960 4 gb's is a nice option to have, boy are they spendy down under!
* Case - The Deepcool case is okay, I prefer the Corsair 100R or 200R as they will hold lots of parts and will last for several builds.
* Storage - The HD is...
missing the cpu cooler...skylake retial cpu now down have heat sinks. also swap out the 520 for the xfx 650 that 30.00 more the xfx units are rebranded seasonic units. using the larger power supply if you ever put in a higher end gpu you wont have to swap out the power supply.
 
Well the build looks alright. I'm assuming this build is primarily used for gaming, if so there are some tweaks that I'd consider:

* CPU - you could drop down to the i5 6500 and save some $ there.
* Mobo - Looks fine, assuming it has the options that you want (you won't be OC'ing the CPU with that board, but your CPU is locked so no big deal there)
* RAM - 8 gb's is generally all you need, but if you want 16 gb's then go for it.
* PSU - is a good and solid option to buy (Seasonics are good PSU's).
* GPU - GTX 960 4 gb's is a nice option to have, boy are they spendy down under!
* Case - The Deepcool case is okay, I prefer the Corsair 100R or 200R as they will hold lots of parts and will last for several builds.
* Storage - The HD is fine, but it is a shame that you couldn't fit in a Samsung 850 EVO or Crucial BX100 (250-256 gb sizes) into the build. You will notice the quicker boot/load times and will make your system in and around Winodows much more enjoyable, IMHO. If you go down to 8 gb's of RAM, maybe you could swing for the SSD instead of the 1 TB HD, but that is up to you.
 
Solution
Yes it will work nice. Mortar and bazooka has no difference in performance. The differences are no VGA port and only 5.1 channel sound support on bazooka. while mortar has VGA port and 7.1 ch support. PSU will work great . Just get a 256gb samsung 850 , quite cheap these days.
 


Only the K series don't come with a cooler.
 


Only unlocked ones come without heat sinks . Rest have cooler bundled.
And 650W is needed only for Radeon GPUs , I have a 650W seasonic and gtx 960 and my consumption goes 190W max. I regret buying too powerful PSU. even if he uses a R9 390 or 980 TI , his consumption will be 380W max.
 


already have a 150gb ssd but thanks
 


Don't you love them not including at least a stock CPU HSF with the K series CPU's? I know most enthusiasts get a different cooler anyway, but why not just give the option with a $5-10 price difference? Most people could deal with a stock CPU HSF until they want to OC or get cooler/quieter system and will spend $ on a better CPU HSF.

Yeah most people overpower their systems with bigger PSU's than they need, but I think most people don't realize that most single GPU systems don't use more than 200-300w, unless you have an AMD exclusive higher end system (CPU and GPU).
 


Thats a good move to save electronic waste atleast , but they should sell it differently for all CPUs and let user decide if he wants the stock cooler or not. There is just too much misconception and myth feeding about PSU these days , 90% ppl these days suggest 650W minimum and give unreasonable justifications of using dual GPU and stuff when someone is thinking hard to go between 750ti and 960. I could have done away with a 420W seasonic with flying colors.
 


I totally agree with you. The PSU is always quoted too high, IMHO. Most PC's would run fine on a quality PSU at about 350-400w and be just fine. This is assuming your not OC'ing and not going all Ham on the GPU front, but you know what I mean.

Here is a good read about older 380w PSU with e6600 and GTX 8800.

It sorta spells out how that PSU could run (maybe not the best idea for 24/7 operation, but it could) a higher end system at that time.