Is this computer good for games?

My friend is thinking of buying a used computer, and has only 350 dollars with which to work. She loves games, though, so she will need a lot of something. What is the ‘something’ that computers need to accomodate a lot of games? I think they need a lot of hd space and 256 ram, or better, but I’m not sure. So, what is needed for games.
The one that she wants is an IBM Pentium 3, with 700mhz, and 256 ram.
Any information would be greatly appreciated.

That’ll be OK for Tetris. If she wants to play current games along the lines of Half-Life, she needs to aim her sights a whole lot higher.

A current “decent” platform for gaming now is a Pentium 4 at 3.0 GHz (or similar in an AMD proc), 1 GB RAM and a gaming videocard.

Depends on the type of games and the enviroment- online vs stand alone.

That’d work great for many games.

Other relevant info would be about the video card/chip

It is probably ok for about %70 of the budget (repackaged) games in the shops. Mostly two dimensional, resource management (god games), puzzle games,

If that PC costs 350, it had better come complete with a monitor, keyboard and mouse.

High or low end, the video card is going to make or break the machine on any simulation-type game, with RAM and CPU reasonably behind.
With a low-end video card, my PIII 1Ghz with 512M of RAM could barely run Halo or Battlefield 1942. After I threw a $50 GeForce 5200 in it, you can actually hold your own in these games, given a medium video setting.

It would help a lot if you said what kind of games she likes. With a title name or two I’m sure many people can give a minimum spec for parts, and whether or not you can get there given what you’ve got.

Just what kind of games does she have in mind?

If it’s hangman and tetris as gotpasswords said, that rig will be fine. If it’s modern 3D games like World of Warcraft, Rome Total war, etc, then that rig is certainly not good enough.

$350 is very low for a gaming machine, even if you’e building one yourself (which I would recommend you do, if you know what you are doing).

for modenr games a low-end system might look somehting like this:

AMD 2600+ CPU
512 MB RAM
30-60 Gig Hardrive
Geforce FX or ATI 9500+ video card with atleast 128MB VRAM
An EAX 2 compatible soundcard.

The Tetris comment is a little incorrect, and the specifications you list are a little high.

As PatrioxB noted, it will depend on the games. It will also depend on the person’s preference for detail. For example, running a game released in 2004 in 1600x1200 resolution on a P3-700MHz with 256MB of RAM is a bad idea. Running a game released in 2002 in 1024x768 on the same computer won’t be a problem. My computer is a P3-933MHz with 512MB of RAM, and a GeForce 5200FX video card that I purchased last year for $50. I’m able to play City of Heroes, Battlefield 1942, Madden 2005, et cetera, but not on the highest detail levels. I clearly won’t try to play Half-Life 2, Far Cry, or Doom 3 on this, but with careful attention to the requirements of games, I can still get a good deal of enjoyment out of it.

Does she want to play the newest, flashiest games? If so, she won’t be able to manage that with $350.

Frankly, your friends is probably better off with a console his he wants to do serious gaming on the cheap. $350 will get you your current-gen console of choice, plus 4-6 games. There’s a decent number of adult-targeted console games out there - even the Gamecube has some good offerings. Read some reviews, and buy the console with the most games you think you (or your friend) would like.

harry’sgame, as other’s have mentioned, a $350 computer won’t be able to play most recent PC games, however, it’ll do just fine for standard computer usage.

Has your friend considered buying a console in addition to the computer? One can buy a GameCube for a mere $99 and you won’t have any compatibility issues.

What $350 could get you:

1.5mhz cpu
512 ram
64meg video card

**[Grand Total:  	$ 327.89](http://www.newegg.com/)**

of course, you still need an OS
Linkworld ATX Tower Case, Model “3230-01-C6061U” -RETAIL
Specifications:
Case Type: ATX Mid-Tower Case
Color: Beige/Grey
Drive Bays: External 4 x 5.25" - 2 x 3.5" Internal 5 x 3.5"
Expansion Slots: 7
Front Ports: 2x USB
Power Supply: 300W LPJ2-20-P4
Cooling System: Not Included
Dimensions: 18"x8.5"x19.25" more info-> N82E16811164027
$23.50

$23.50

	FOXCONN "600A01-6LRS" KT600 Chipset Motherboard For AMD Socket A CPU -RETAIL

Specifications:
Supported CPU: Socket A for AMD Athlon XP/Athlon/Duron/Sempron
Chipset: VIA KT600 + VT8237
FSB: 400MHz/333MHz
RAM: 3x 184-pin DIMM for DDR 400/333/266 (Max. 3GB)
IDE: 2x UDMA 133 up to 4 Devices
Slots: 1x AGP 8X/4X, 5x PCI
Ports: 2x PS/2, 2x COM, 1x LPT, 8x USB2.0(Rear 4), 1x LAN, Audio Ports
Onboard Audio: 5.1 channel AC97 (VIA)
Onboard LAN: Integrated Fast Ethernet (10/100) MAC + PHY
Onboard SATA/RAID: 2x SATA150, RAID 0/1/0+1
Form Factor: ATX more info-> N82E16813186025
$39.00

$39.00

	APOLLO nVIDIA GeForce MX4000 Video Card, 64MB DDR, TV-Out, 8X AGP, Model "Bloody Monster GeForce4 MX4000 64MB" -RETAIL

Specifications:
Chipset/Core Speed: nVIDIA GeForce MX4000/275MHz
Memory/Effective Speed: 64MB DDR/400MHz
BUS: AGP 8x/4x
Ports: VGA Out(15 Pin D-Sub) + TV-Out (S-Video Out)
Support 3D API: DirectX 7, OpenGL 1.3
Max Resolution@32bit Color: 2048X1536@75Hz
Cable/Accessories: S-Video Cable, Driver CD
Retail Box (See pics for details) more info-> N82E16814140038
$33.50

$33.50

	AMD Sempron 2200+ 1.5GHz, 333MHz FSB, 256KB L2 Processor - OEM

Specifications:
Model: AMD Sempron 2200+
Core: Thoroughbred
Operating Frequency: 1.5GHz
FSB: 333 MHz
Cache: L1/64K+64K; L2/ 256KB
Voltage: 1.6V
Process: 0.13Micron
Socket: Socket A
Multimedia Instruction: MMX, SSE, 3DNOW!, 3DNOW!+
Packaging: OEM(Processor Only) more info-> N82E16819104201
$49.00

$49.00

	Corsair Value Select 184 Pin 512MB DDR PC-3200 - Retail

Specification
Manufacturer: Corsair
Speed: DDR400(PC3200)
Type: 184 Pin DDR SDRAM
Error Checking: Non-ECC
Registered/Unbuffered: Unbuffered
Cas Latency: 2.5
Support Voltage: 2.5V
Bandwidth: 3.2GB/s
Organization: 64M x 64 -Bit
Warranty: Lifetime
more info-> N82E16820145026
$62.17

$62.17

	Alps Beige 3.5inch Floppy Disk Drive, Model DF354H068F, OEM

Specifications:
Capacity: 1.44MB
Average Access Time: 3 ms (track to track)
Interface: 34 Pin Standard Floppy Connector
Form: 3.5 inch
Media Type: All Standard 1.44MB & 720KB 3.5 Floppy Diskettes
Features: High reliability attained by the employment of a direct-drive motor
Packaging: OEM more info-> N82E16821103301
$8.00

$8.00

	Crackin' Deals!

SAMSUNG 40GB 7200RPM Light and Slim IDE Hard Drive, Model SP0411N, OEM Drive only
Specifications:
Capacity: 40GB
Average Seek Time: 11 ms
Buffer: 2MB
Rotational Speed: 7200 RPM
Interface: IDE ULTRA ATA133
Features: Fluid Dynamic Bearing Spindle Motor Technology
Manufacturer Warranty: 3 years
Packaging: OEM Drive only more info-> N82E16822152008
$45.00

$45.00

	Samsung Beige 52X CD-ROM, Model SH-152AEBUW, OEM

Specifications:
Read Speed: 52X Max CD-ROM
Interface: E-IDE/ATAPI
Buffer: 128KB
Access Time: 80 ms
Data Transfer Rate: 7800KB/sec
Features: Supported Disc CD-R/RW,CD-DA,CD-ROM/XA,Video-CD,CD-I, Multisession Photo CD,CD-EXTRA
Packaging: OEM (see pictures for details) more info-> N82E16827151045
$15.00

$15.00

	Masscool Silver thermal grease, Model "Stars-700" -RETAIL

Specifications:
Dimensions: Injection tube: 55x 5x 5mm. (w x d x h)
Weight: 0.5 Gram
Color: Silver
Thermal Conductivity: 7.5 W/m-K
Thermal Resistance: 0.06 C/W
Application: Thermal grease can be used on the rear side of the heatsink which has no thermal pad. It will improve the heat dispatch of your processor more info-> N82E16835100302
$2.99

$2.99

	*** SPECIAL VOLUME DISCOUNT ***

Masscool 80mm DC Case fan, Model “FD08025S1M4”
Specification:
Compatibility: Case, Power Supply
Dimensions: 80 x 80 x 25 mm
Bearing Type: Sleeve
Nominal Speed(RPM): 2500+/-10%
Max Air Flow:(CFM): 31.73
Rated Voltage: 12V DC
Connector: 3+4 Pin
Noise(dBA): 28.0
Special Features: ISO9002 Certified more info-> N82E16835150007
$2.09

$2.09

	Ascent 60mm CPU Cooler for Socket A/ 370 CPUs, Model "AC2500T" -RETAIL

Specifications:
Compatibility: Up to AMD Athlon XP 1900+, Athlon 1.4Ghz (Socket A); Intel Pentium III (Socket 370) 1.33 Ghz and beyond
Dimensions: Fan: 60(L)X60(W)X25(H)mm; Heatsink: 60(L)X61(W)X37(H)mm
Bearing Type: Ball
Nominal Speed(RPM): 4800+/-10%
Max Air Flow(CFM): 26.3
Max Pressure: 5.2 mmH2O
Fan Material: Plastic
Heat Sink Material: Extruded Aluminum Alloy 6063-T5
Connector: 3 Pin Molex 2695
Rated Voltage: 12V
Noise(dBA): 38 more info-> N82E16835182016
$4.49

$4.49

Subtotal: 284.74 Tax: .00
Shipping & Handling: 43.15 Grand Total: 327.89

Microsoft has a page where they will scan your computer and then tell you which games it will run. I can’t remember the title of the page—I think it’s Windows XP Game Advisor or something like that.

My 1.5 GHz AMD PC with 1 GB of RAM and a 128 MB video card “passed” for all games that I tried out (and I tried almost all of 'em). I doubt my PC would run all these games great, but it “passed.” My old 1 GHz Dell with 512 MB RAM and 16 MB video card passed some of the “lighter” games, but didn’t pass that many of the more popular games—it was almost always the video card that was the weak link, and occasionally the processor too. As others have said here, the video card is where it’s at.

I’m not a gamer so it isn’t a big issue for me, thankfully. But from what I understand, trying to keep your PC up-to-date enough to run the “latest” games well is a never-ending battle. Frequent upgrades—or simply buying a new PC—is required if you want to have a really good and current gaming machine. (Some of you hardcore gamers can correct me if I’m wrong. I’m not wrong, am I?) If you want to settle for something that will be okay for a while, get at least 512 megs of RAM (biting the bullet and getting 1 GB probably wouldn’t be a bad idea) and a nice video card.

Yosemite is essentially correct. In order to have a bitchin’ rig you’re looking at an upgrade every year, and a whole new rig every 3 years or so.

It can add up.

I try to stay at the top of the curve most of the time. Currently my main gaming rig is an AMD XP 3200, 400 mhz front side bus, 1 gig of RAM, ATI 9800 Pro card, 80 gig hardrive, and Soundblaster Audigy sound card.

I can play Doom 3 on this rig without much problem at a decent resolution and with most bells and whitles. A very good cool gaming experience! :slight_smile:

That rig cost me about $600 after sellign my old gear on ebay.

I plan on upgrading my mobo, CPU and video card to the new PCI express standard this fall, and it’ll probably run me about $300 after selling my current gear on ebay :slight_smile:

So it’s possible to stay on a good gmaing bracket, but you have to do your homework and know how to get choice hardware at affordable prices, and learn to devote some time to getting that gear and putting it all together yourself.