I've built a dozen or so amps / preamps. Only one (#2 I think) had a problem bad enough to blow a fuse on the variac. Never smoked a resistor, or hooked up an electrolytic capacitor the wrong way. I destroyed one small output transformer breadboarding an early project, not sure how. I always test the power supplies before connecting them to the load. Before powering up, I make sure all ground terminals have low resistance to the single chassis ground point and that all power rail terminals have high resistance to ground. On one preamp channel I forgot a tone stack ground that made the tone stack not work. I generally check off each wire and component on my layout printout before power up. I might have made one socket wiring error on an early build, but I caught it before power up. I bring up everything slowly with the variac, first without tubes, and then with recto tube only, then with the rest. On fixed bias builds, I adjust it to max negative voltage.
A bad solder joint or two have made it into several of my builds. One took me almost 10 years to find...there was this subtle fizzy sound on note decay....made me think the design was somehow defective. During the process of replacing the input jack, I found the bad joint on the shielded input wire.
I've never used a pre-existing layout because I actually enjoy the process of creating a Hoffman-style layout from scratch. They are just so darn logical and systematic! Once or twice I've laced the buss wire around the wrong set of turrets (caught before installing components). If I ever wanted to build something that already had a Hoffman layout, I'd probably use it.
For several of my early projects, I built a prototype board and installed it in scrap chassis just to hear if it was worth building in a pretty box. For many of my later projects, after I make my layout from the schematic, I'll make a pspice schematic from the layout and simulate it with LTSpice. I like to see all the node voltages, currents, and signal levels coming out right before I build.
Now I have fair confidence everything will be functional on the first try. I publish build documentation for each project on my website, which is my way of giving back for all the information I've obtained from the internet. I've been doing more complete docs on later projects. It all seems worth it when builders send me pictures/clips of their clones/adaptations of my projects.
Checking the design and layout before building, and checking the build before power up can be a drag, but I find rework to be a bigger drag, and ruining more expensive things like chassis and transformers is worse.