[–] stinkytaco ago
The original Ace of spades used the 1990's voxlap engine which did 100% software rendering. http://buildandshoot.com/
They call it build and shoot now. It will run on your grandma's toaster, and still is verry fun. lots of players too!
[–] SkepticalMartian ago (edited ago)
I'd go for turn based games. Pick up XCom: Enemy Within (highly recommended!), a Galactic Civilizations title, or FTL. Games like these will probably have the best chance of running well without much compromise (if any).
[–] mcseanerson ago
Not a whole lot. As others have pointed out though it can probably play some Blizzard games. I used to play the hell out of Diablo 3 on my macbook air when I was killing time. Also depends what resolution you play your games at. My native resolution on the macbook air was 1366x768 so it wasn't very taxing. I could also play Dirt 3 and wasn't too bad at Battlefield 3. Granted you will need to turn all the settings down.
[–] bassman1805 ago
IF you don;'t know the specs of your computer, download a program called speccy.
So I can't really can't say I know much about that particular graphics card, but you can check out http://www.systemrequirementslab.com/cyri You can check out games you are interested in and see what hardware and software they would require. Also, if you want to know how your graphics card (or any graphics card) compares to other cards you can check out http://www.videocardbenchmark.net/
[–] Doc_ 0 points 3 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago
I used to have one with the same crappy integrated graphics card, you'd be surprised what you can actually play with low settings. It can probably play Fallout 3/NV on low settings, but not Skyrim. Pretty much anything pre-2010, excluding stuff like Crysis obviously, as long as you aren't too fussed about amazing framerates. For example mine could do games like Payday 1 and Metro 2033 at about 30fps on low settings... so tolerable.
[–] null_error ago
You could play Dwarf Fortress