Thank you so much but is there anyone who live in Europe? Buying from us market for me is expensive, prices inflate for shipping and taxes
Finland here, but it's still Europe.
You have two choices first. Either start with a kit, or go full on and get parts and PCB's separately. I would suggest starting off with a kit for your first build.
This would be the #1 option for me
https://www.musikding.de/Mach-1-Overdrive-kit, but it's out of stock. You can set a reminder there for it. You can get an unpainted enclosure that is pre-drilled too from Musikding.
Other kit alternative I know of would be from Fuzzdog
https://shop.pedalparts.co.uk/product/186282mps, but you will probably need to pay customs from the UK.
The alternative is to get parts and PCB's separately, but for PedalPCB PCB's you will have to order from their store, and the postage and customs cost quite a bit. I order around 5 or more at a time when there's a small discount, which helps. They come out to around ~15€ or a bit less per PCB.
Buying all the parts is a pain though since you need to learn what type of parts you want - it's also quite fun and rewarding in the long run, but to make it worthwhile you probably want to order parts in bulk. The learning curve and bulk buying leads me to suggest the kit for a starter.
If you go with the kit, you will still need the following at a minimum:
1.) Soldering Iron
2.) Solder
3.) Wire cutters
I would definitely suggest having thin nosed pliers, a digital multimeter and the solder sucker as suggested earlier in case you need to desolder any parts (mistakes and such). I also use a PCB holder and a tool to help with bending resistor and diode legs, although you can get by without those. Musikding also has some tools if you need those, or the pliers and wire cutters can easily be had locally. I assume you have an iron and solder already if you've soldered before?
If you're going to buy the components, I would suggest Tayda Electronics. They're in Thailand, and shipping costs and customs are expensive again, but I still found them the cheapest option for me (plus they have pre-drilled enclosures, and even UV printing services to get your own design on the pedals - that's a whole another learning experience though). Other options for parts would be Mouser or Digikey - they have free shipping over 50€ (at least for Mouser), but it was still more expensive than Tayda for me.