Intel Core i7 2600K
$329.00
Western Digital Green 2TB WD20EARX
2x$129.00 $258.00
Intel 520 Series 120GB SSD
$239.00
ASRock Z68 Fatal1ty Professional Gen3
$255.00
G.Skill Ripjaws X F3-12800CL9Q-16GBXL (4x4GB) DDR3
$115.00
CoolerMaster Hyper 212 EVO CPU Cooler
$39.00
Aerocool Strike X Panel
$59.00
Aerocool Strike-X ST Black Super Full Tower
$249.00
Corsair Vengeance M90 MMO and RTS Laser Gaming Mouse
$79.00
Microsoft Sidewinder X4 Keyboard
$59.00
Wacom Intuos4 6x9inch Graphic Tablet PTK640
$369.00
Razer Vespula Dual-Sided Mouse Mat
$39.00
Samsung SH-B123L 12X Blu-Ray DVD Combo Drive with Lightscribe
$75.00
Lian Li CR-36 Black Multimedia Card Reader
$35.00
Gigabyte GeForce GTX 570 1280MB Overclocked V2
2x$369.00 $738.00
Antec High Current Gamer 750W Power Supply HCG-750
$139.00
My suggestions:
WoW doesn't use SLI. If you want "the best" then get a single GTX 580. Alternately get a single GTX 560 Ti 448 Core. Or even a single GTX 560 Ti. At that high a level of GPU WoW won't care.
With a single graphics card, you will only need around 500W of power. The XFX Core 550W seems to be a great value as well as great quality.
Note that Blu-Ray drives typically do not come with playback software. You will not be able to watch Blu-Ray movies without such playback software. That software can cost $100.
No overclocking? No aftermarket CPU cooler needed. Just use the stock heatsink that comes with the CPU.
With the money saved on not using dual graphics cards, bump up the CPU to the 2700K. The software you listed (and even WoW) will probably benefit a lot more from that than the zero benefit of dual graphics cards.
That is an expensive motherboard. Typically the more expensive motherboards are expensive due to purported overclocking prowess and capacity for multiple graphics cards. Since you are not overclocking and not running dual cards, feel free to aim for a lower end motherboard. Even the lowest end boards will have gigabit Ethernet, USB 3.0, SATA 6G. What else do you need? A $150 Z68 chipset motherboard will give you everything. About the only thing you would want to pay attention to would be for USB 3.0 headers if your case choice has USB 3.0 ports that use headers (if they use a pass-through, choose a different case). Not all motherboards have such headers, so that's probably the one thing you'll want to pay attention to.
For $115, you may as well look for a 16GB RAM kit that is two 8GB sticks. This way you leave two slots free in case you want to upgrade in the future.
That case + Strike X panel is kind of pricey. You can totally go micro ATX on the case if you choose a micro ATX motherboard (which are very common). For instance $100 will get you the Silverstone Temjin TJ-08B-E case which is compact and attractive, has enough airflow for your parts and can still hold TWICE as many drives as you are getting.
I won't comment much on the peripherals (keyboard, mouse, pad, etc.) other than saying that many companies make a product look really zingy and slap a "gaming" moniker on it as an excuse to charge more. In actual use they don't work any better than any other quality product.
If you follow my suggestions and save a bundle of money, use that saved money towards a larger SSD. I would suggest one based on the Marvell controller as that is more proven than the Sandforce in terms of reliability - even though you choose an Intel Sandforce. Intel charges a huge premium for their name! You can get a nice 256GB Marvell based SSD for just over $300. Heck, with all the savings (one graphics card, cheaper case, cheaper motherboard) you can spring for a 512GB SSD!!!