There's only two and a half things you should think about as part of your "upgrade" path down the road really.
1. Get a good case, that's EASY to access everything while still not being bigger than you need. Fuck how it looks. Personally, I like Antec's bland flat series because when you pop open the flat front door on them, FREE HANDLE INSIDE.
2. Get a good power supply. Unless you really go tight on your first one, it's rare to actually draw more than a power supply can handle, so these can last you multiple upgrades.
The half is the motherboard. If you want Intel though, ehhh this isn't really going to work because they change the socket constantly. Falling behind on RAM innovations isn't the worst thing in the world of the things you can fall behind on, large chunks of RAM often do more visibly than speed increases of something already measured in the nanoseconds.
As noted, don't waste your money on a SSD for storage. You want that for OS and programs mainly. Get regular large hard drives for your storage. Copy whatever you're working on currently over to the SSD, then back if you need to. If you're going to be transporting your work files, it's better to spend on an external drive for storage than waste it on a SSD. Spend more on RAM space for video editing.
Assuming you actually do want to game. Forget the 1050, get a 1060 6GB or higher. At 6GB or higher you have more RAM on your video card than the base consoles can feed for EVERYTHING, so you'll be playing almost anything that's also getting a console version. At 1080p, you'll be playing almost everything with actual PC bonus features too. There's a double point to this with a generation swap coming probably. You want to skip the first cycle of cards anyway because it's the second generation that nvidia or AMD tend to with a price/performance card that tears up the consoles and lasts you for years on end. So right now, you probably don't want to go crazy on say the new RTX's if price concerns are paramount.