I'm almost done assembling a Kibler Southern Mountain Rifle kit. These are the tools I've used so far, not necessarily in the order in which they've been used...
A rough file. Half round, but so far I've only used the flat side.
A fairly fine mill file.
A triangular file, with a 'safe' side created on my disc sander.
An old flat screwdriver, used as a punch to crimp the edges of dovetail slots down onto the barrel lugs.
A 1/4" chisel - fanatically sharpened, and touched up often. I left the sides sharp after grinding the backside flat when I was tuning it, and held vertically it makes a good scraper for slightly enlarging a shallow inlet in the wood. I've also used it for scraping the bottom of an inlet sometimes, instead of trying to take thin shavings. I have a lot of other chisels, but so far I've had no urge to dig them out. I guess that's a testament to how little wood I've had to remove so far...
Prussian blue, (not really a tool, I guess. But I've used heck out of it).
A fat-handled stubby screwdriver, slightly hollow-ground so it engages at the bottom of the slot, instead of the top.
A round wood mallet, and a piece of dowel.
A pair of linesman pliers to cut pins from the supplied piano wire, and a small ball peen hammer to drive them.
A DeWalt cordless drill motor.
A couple of miscellaneous clamps.
An adjustable roller stand commandeered from my table saw, to place under the end away from the vice. I try to remember to throw an old piece of chamois between it and the wood, if I'm working on the stock.
A serious led light stand pointed over my shoulder, and an articulating desk lamp to fill in the shadows.
And that's it so far, folks, even though I have a fairly well-appointed shop. Aside from a pair of soft jaws for my vice, of course. I drilled and tapped the jaws on my old bench vise, bolted leather-lined wood jaws on top of them, and they work fine. They come off in a New York minute with a ratchet, if I want the vise for something else.
I suspect that if I were building some other kit instead of a Kibler, the tool list might be longer.
add: ignore the wider chisel in the pic. I was levering it off my knuckle to open a bottle of New Belgium's Voodoo Ranger IPA, after work was done. And the block plane behind the mallet never got put away, after I used it to trim the leather pads.
add 2: forgive my non-technical description of the files. I'm still a third-generation woodworker more than a machinist, in spite of my current job.