SetupFit preview

Find the setup that fits your goal, space, and budget.

SetupFit is a guided desk setup advisor. It turns broad needs into a decision profile, compares setup paths, and builds a starter shopping list with fit notes and compatibility checks.

Decision model Wide input ready
Goal Profile Path List
Primary path Laptop Dock Path
Trade-off Speed over deep customization
Next action Review compatibility notes

Wide input

Start with goals, desk constraints, and owned gear instead of exact hardware specs.

Decision profile

Identify whether the user is space-first, speed-first, budget-first, support-first, or creator-first.

Path first

Recommend a setup path before individual products, so the list has a reason to exist.

Step by step

From a rough need to a usable setup plan

Users should understand the product in the first few seconds, then reach their first recommendation without needing to think like a hardware builder.

01

Choose your starting point

Pick the closest scenario: fast remote work, better calls, clean small desk, or creator-ready.

02

Lock goals and constraints

Tell the advisor what matters most: budget, space, speed, support, or compatibility risk.

03

Compare setup paths

See the primary path and alternatives, with clear trade-offs instead of raw part lists.

04

Review the starter list

Open a shopping list with fit notes, compatibility checks, price estimates, and purchase links.

Ready to run the first setup check?

Start with a preset, lock the brief, and let the advisor generate a path and starter list.

Open Desk Setup Builder

Not a hardware configurator

SetupFit does not ask users to pick a motherboard, socket, chipset, or exact power budget on the first screen. Compatibility is handled as an internal recommendation gate and shown only when it helps the user make a safer purchase decision.

Built for clear trade-offs

Each setup path explains what it solves, what it sacrifices, and what the user should confirm before buying. The current MVP focuses on compact desk setups, remote work, creator calls, and small-space constraints.