CBA,
OK, Its cool that you are excited and there is nothing wrong with that hard desire to fill up your humidor, but learn from some of us that bought a whole lot of the wrong cigars to start with. Samplers are great, they let you try different brands to see what you like. Id avoid fivers and multiples of anything in quantities of more than one or two until you have smoked them and know you like them. Be careful of the flashy cigars with huge advertising campaigns, they often sell more hype than flavor. Ignore ratings, they are a slippery slope and many lousy cigars are basing all of their sales on one good rating they got fifteen years ago when one good crop made their cigar far better than usual. Do a bunch of reading here, especially the threads on wish lists, reviews, and the what Im smoking today as you will start to see the same cigars listed again and again.
Here are some brands I recommend, Get samplers from Pepin, Tatuaje, Arturo Fuente, La Gloria, Illusione, La Aurora, La Flor and Padron and smoke them. As you find cigars you like post up here lists of your favorites and the ones you didnt like and youll get suggestions on what else to try. I started out filling and buying humidors faster than I was smoking them and wasted a lot of money on cigars I didnt like. Remember three things:
Experience is what you get when you dont get what you want - its not bad to smoke a single bad cigar, but it sucks to have 24 left in your humidor once you know its a bad smoke.
Smoke what you like and like what you smoke There is lots of hype out there, some companies like Gurkha dont own a single tobacco farm, dont employ a single roller and have cigars rolled for them, but mostly are a huge marketing company. They have a few winners now and then, but by using fancy shapes, cedar wrappings, glass tubes and fancy cigar boxes sell $4-5 cigars for far higher prices. Sorry if I offend any Gurkha fans, I like some too, but only at huge discounts from MSRP.
Third thing is the most important, learn how to smoke a cigar. I know it sounds silly, but trust me that until you learn to toast a cigar instead of blasting it with a blow torch while you are sucking on it, learn to control your puffing into slow deliberate blasts of flavor well spaced out and when to put a cigar down you will have lots of good cigars start out bad and get worse.