Getting into PC gaming should not feel impossible.

My name is Adib. I'm 23, a college student in BC, and I grew up around computers. My father ran a small repair shop building PCs, fixing them, and selling parts to anyone who walked through the door. Atlas Workshop is my way of continuing that story, while building something of my own.

Why I Built It

I have seen friends get excited about PC gaming, then get stuck the second they start looking at parts. Every component has a socket, a generation, a wattage number, and ten people online saying something different.

Atlas is meant to make that first step less stressful. Pick your budget, understand what you are buying, and build with a little more confidence instead of feeling like you are guessing the whole way through.

No mystery parts

You should know what is going into your PC, what it costs, and why it makes sense.

Less learning curve

PC gaming has a steep learning curve. Atlas is here to make the first steps feel less heavy.

Fairer pricing

The goal is less prebuilt markup and more money kept for the parts that matter.

Make the learning curve feel less brutal.

PC gaming is amazing, but getting into it can feel like walking into a world nobody explained to you. CPUs, GPUs, sockets, watts, airflow, compatibility, Windows installs. It stacks up fast.

I wanted Atlas Workshop to make that process feel easier. Not by pretending PC building is simple, but by giving people a cleaner path through it so more people feel welcome in the PC gaming community.

Three ways to stop guessing.

A national PC building and education platform.

The long-term goal is bigger than selling parts. I want Atlas to become a place where anyone, especially people who are new, can build, learn, compare, ask questions, and feel like they actually belong in the PC gaming world.

Business inquiries

adibc@theatalasworkshop.com

For order help or general support, email support@theatlasworkshop.com