

Medal of Honor: Pacific Assault (2004) screenshots Shadow Ops: Red Mercury (2004) screenshots The lower it is on the list, the smaller the download and the better it will run: like it was can of Pringles potato chips. I was able to play even some "modern" games like Fallout 3/New Vegas and Resident Evil: Revelations with my last desktop (and even more up to date games using the same system + a GT240 GPU, that didn't survived for more than six months on my hands), at playable frame rates assuming that i used low graphic configurations. Medal of Honor: Allied (and Pacific) Assaultĭark Forces 2: Jedi Knight (and Jedi Academy)Īlso, since we're both from the same country, i would recommend you to save some little amount of money (something around 100 bucks) and buy a cheap video card if you can't afford a new computer for now. So here's what i think it would work for ya, phantombeta: However, thanks to that experience i became quite good at picking my games, because they had to work properly on my poor systems or i wouldn't play anything. It's not that good, but it's the closer to an up to date computer that i ever had. My last desktop is still alive though, a 3,2Ghz Dual Core with 2GB RAM and a Geforce 8400 GS (which fried to death last year) that i used to play some light stuff and Doom modding, but thanks to my girlfriend i'm now using her old laptop that she gave me as a gift.


I never had a top computer, and all my desktops since the PII were frankenstein-ish, re-using parts of other dead pcs that my friends were about to throw away (and for that reason i had 8 different computers since my PII from 2007 to now, because they lived 1 or two years long at max). Than, my second PC was a PII in 2007, and so on. My first PC was a 486 that i used until 2004. For a self-described "gamer", my practical experience is actually pretty shallow. This continued until I was an independent adult in about 2009, and by then games had progressed so far, i pretty much forsook everything from the late 90s to the early 00s, and I've still missed a ton because I really can't afford games anyway. We never had money for games either, so I mostly played a demos from those "500 shareware games!" CDs from the mid-90s, and ancient hand-me-down DOS games on 5.25 floppies. I had some really old frankenstein PCs at home (like 486's and a PII), and my parents never had enough money to keep us up-to-date on consoles. Caligari_87 wrote:My early teen years (1997-2006) were weird for gaming.
