Zuuke was founded by two Computer Science students at Florida International University who believed that building a PC should not require hours of research, spreadsheets, or prior technical knowledge. They set out to change that.
Like thousands of students, we wanted to build our own PCs. But the process was overwhelming— dozens of browser tabs, Reddit threads with conflicting advice, spreadsheets to track compatibility, and still the nagging feeling that we'd get something wrong. We spent weeks researching what should have taken hours.
We were taking a CS elective when the idea clicked. What if someone could just describe what they wanted — in plain English — and get a complete, compatible, optimized build back instantly? No spreadsheets. No forum-diving. No fear of making an expensive mistake. We started building that weekend.
With no funding, no team, and final exams looming, we built Zuuke from scratch — late nights, campus coffee shops, and more debugging sessions than we'd like to admit. Every design decision, every line of code, every prompt tweak was done by the two of us. This is our project, our product, and our story.
Zuuke is live, helping people build better PCs faster than ever before. We're still students. We're still learning. But we're shipping— and we're just getting started.
Yash is a Computer Science student at Florida International University with a passion for building products that solve real problems. He leads Zuuke's product strategy and user experience, driven by a simple belief: that powerful technology should be accessible to everyone, regardless of their technical background.
Zuuke started as his frustration and became his mission.
Tai is a Computer Science student at Florida International University who architected and built the technical foundation of Zuuke from the ground up. From AI integration to real-time streaming infrastructure, he turns ambitious ideas into reliable, scalable products.
He believes that great engineering is what separates a good idea from a great product.
Building a PC shouldn't require a computer science degree. It should require knowing what you want to do with it.
— The Zuuke TeamTry Zuuke free — no account needed to start. See what two students built for you.
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