You've already gotten some excellent advise so I'm not going to rehash any of it but I will offer one additional bit of advise. Pick a project FIRST. The tools required are really dependant on what you are going to carve. I understand from your previous posts above that you are looking to do relief carving for furniture. Great! Now be more specific . What exactly will be your first carving?
Here's the thing. You won't need every tool for every carving project. Additionally, some carvings require more tools than others. For example, if you want to carve a simple convex lobed applied shell like the one Mike did for his first shell tutorial, you'll need considerably fewer tools than if you want to do a more complex convex/concave curved lobed shell. The reason is access. Concave shapes always require more and different sweeps to do than convex shapes because you need sweeps to match the concave areas of the carving. As a matter of fact, you can carve a straight, convex lobed fan or shell with little more than a parting tool and a bench chisel. Straight chisels can be used bevel down to do a lot of convex work.
Carving a B&C foot actually requires only a couple of tools. I did my first one with little more than a couple bench chisels, a 1/2" #3, a 1/2" #5 and a 1/4" #7 (English system numbering).
So pick a specific carving you would like to do and then come back here and let us know what you chose and we should be able to give you a better idea of actual tools to get so you don't waste money on tools you don't need. Then for your next carving, you can add the additional tools you don't yet have.
As others have said, pre-assembled sets are really not a good buy as you will be paying upwards of $30 per tool for a lot of tools you may never use. Instead, make your own set as you go along. If you have $200 to spend, get the 4 or 5 tools needed for a specific carving, a slip stone or two, some honing oil, a strop, some green honing compund, maybe a DVD and some wood to practice on. That should be a good starter set .