First of all, don't get windows 8. It's shit for anyone who is going to be derping around in the system files. It literally hides things from you. If you think you have to search for hidden files in windows 7, it gets 10 times worse in windows 8. Any system builder will tell you the same. Windows 7 actually runs most games better, and there are many applications that will not run on windows 8 without emulating windows 7.
If you're going to do any sort of modding, switching around game files, or file management: windows 7 is the way to go. Every time. without Exception.
Moving on, ditch the SSD, unless for some reason it's free since I can't see the price. If It's free, buy the shit out of it. It's most likely stupidly expensive and you will have to be constantly downloading and deleting data with something that size. You cannot do that on an SSD. Any SSD is actually bigger than what it says on the box. Every SSD comes with extra space that is not shown on any computer without special equipment. That space is reserved for depositing corrupted files every time you delete or overwrite things. On an SSD, every time you delete something, a small part of the SSD permanently corrupts, and you can never get that space back. Constantly deleting games and putting them back will put immense stress on that and eventually cause it to fail completely. SSD's are ONLY for data you will almost never move. If you have one, only put your favorite, most beloved, or most critical games/apps/systems on it. The kind that you will never delete. Having only an SSD is a recipe for disaster, as any netbook or laptop user can tell you. Those mobile PC's hard drives only last 1-3 years for a reason. Don't make the same mistake with a 1700 dollar PC. For 70-80 dollars, you can get a 7200 RPM 1tb hard drive that will only be slightly inferior in terms of loading time and boot time. By all means get an SSD eventually, but that should be an aftermarket upgrade to be used sparingly, not your main drive. Ever.
You probably don't need that liquid CPU cooler unless you intend to overclock that CPU to over 4.6 ghz. quite frankly, if you're overclocking an I5 to 4.6gz, you might as well buy a 4 core I7 that is already rated at 4 and go from there with a cheaper cooler. You probably aren't going to do that.
Just get a 40 dollar coolermaster CPU cooler, it will run a CPU at around 4.00 ghz cooler than you can imagine, even on tough games. Liquid cooled is for super-clockers and financial data servers. Not the average gamer.
You don't need that motherboard either. The system crystal is too fast for your CPU, I wouldn't recommend it unless you were getting a 6 core I7, and there's no way you're going to need the durability and slot space that has. For 100 dollars, you can get an ASUS motherboard with like 10 USB3.0 and 2.0 slots as well as tons of other goodies. That board is just too much for gaming and even light business purposes. It's more of a light-server board than a real gaming PC motherboard.
About the RAM, be careful mixing and matching colors. If its just cosmetic, go for it. But in my experience, kingston RAM changes by color. If the timing (totally different than the speed, it regards how it actually functions) is different from the white, you're in for a nasty surprise when you turn it on. Also, if you don't fill in all the RAM slots, make sure you read the motherboard manual as to which slots need to be occupied first. If you just load all the RAM and all the slots are filled it obviously doesn't matter, but if you have slots open, you could fry the RAM by putting it in in the wrong order.
I love your PSU. It's fantastic. Keep it. Great choice there.
With all the money you save from doing that, you can get any damn monitor you want.