Intel HD graphics are a bad choice. They deliver minimal graphics, and play hot while gaming. The ram is pretty good, and I think the hard drive would work. I suggest you get a desktop if you want to play games well, but please, don't get Intel HD graphics
Simply put, if you want to play video games, you're probably going to need a laptop with a graphics card. Its nearly impossible for a novice to add a graphics card to an old laptop because of compatibility issues with the motherboard and the lack of room in the laptop chassis. However, there are several ways to increase the performance of your laptop. You can add RAM, swap out the hard drive for a faster Solid State Drive SSD, upgrade your operating system, delete any unnecessary programs running in memory and you can tweak your settings in Windows. But, none of these options will magically turn your laptop into a gaming laptop. The kind of specs you need to run modern games can be found in a gaming laptop like the one in the related link.
if ur system has switchable graphics,make sure that the system is currently running on dedicated graphics.
Run time will vary on individual laptop computers, based on the applications being used (i.e. high graphics, games), the number of times something is saved or retrieved from the hard drive and/or CD Rom drive, the memory of laptop, and chemistry and capacity of the laptop battery. A realistic average run-time for a laptop battery is 1.5 to 3 hours. Again, run time will vary on applications being used and individual laptops.
Alienware laptops are the best for high end Gaming
all games need a dedicated to make real
You need a modernized laptop to play DX 11 Games. Laptop graphics dont come externally only desktops can. Look up Alienware and they will have special laptops that are designed for gaming
If games are running slowly on your laptop you may need to upgrade your RAM, graphics card, or your processor.
Graphics Cards/Video Cards are necessary for all games and videos. Though computers tend to come with one or the other, and they also tend to be quite crappy. My $700 laptop came with an integrated graphics card in the motherboard, yet a $550 dollar laptop I saw had an even better graphics card, but a smaller screen.
My laptop is a sony vaio with a geforce graphics card. It'll run you about £1500 but it has amazing graphics and an unrivaled processing system. It has 3d glasses and a large memory capacity.
need more info on the graphics card
Not really, unless your CPU and/or memory and/or graphics card is overclocked, in which case it might be more prone to damage.
You can check out systemrequirementslab.com to see if your laptop play a certain game- chances are if it has integrated graphics and it's not a new model, then you will be stuck with much older titles (diablo 2 and older).