People come up with hair-brained schemes like this to save people from soldering without tying their hands so they can't make anything cool. I've seen a bunch of things like this, usually at a yardsale or the dump's take it or leave it pile. They never work, they always cost too much, limit the scope of your projects - the most successful ones end up costing some newbies their money and enthusiasm, and the only time anyone makes something cool with them, it's in spite of it, not because of it.
The solution is to get better at soldering, and get some breakout boards for the types of packages you're working with. Soldering really isn't that hard if you have a temperature controlled soldering iron, normal 37/63 leaded solder (lead free solder is much harder to use), some gel flux, and a bit of practice. There are videos on it, lots of information all over the internet. It's frustrating when you don't know how to solder, but once you get the hang of it and it's no longer a barrier, just another process that you know how to do, a great many doors open to you.
For SMD parts, the key technique is "drag soldering" - there are videos of it, and it's almost like magic.
I don't even use breadboard now - i just wire things up on a scrap of prototyping board, soldered in place.