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In any case though, you can do quite a lot of gaming on even a Pentium with Intel Integrated.
Most fully 2D games will work. 2.5D (i.e. 2D with 3D effects) may vary depending on the game. Some 3D games that have been optimized well will probably also work, albeit at mid or low settings.
I used to have a laptop with a Pentium processor and Intel Integrated 3000. TF2 ran, albeit a bit choppily. Terraria ran fine, though I couldn't do fullscreen. I haven't tried Terraria since, but TF2 runs quite smoothly on a fourth-generation i5 with Integrated 4400.
There are a number of excellent 3D games that probably will run fine, including The Legend of Heroes: Trails in the Sky, Gurumin, and the Ys games. Those were released around 2004-2007, and they are certain very well-designed and pretty. I know I ran these on couple laptops with i5/i7 processors and Intel Integrated 4400/4000 graphics cards, and they ran just fine.
There are also a ton of great 2D games, including shmups like the Tale of Alltynex trilogy, platformers like Stealth B*stard and Mutant Mudds, metroidvanias/zeldalikes such as Aquaria, Anodyne, and Mystik Belle, and survival adventures/roguelikes like Dungeons of Dredmor and Organ Trail, that are also quite likely to run on an older computer.
And of course, point-and-click adventures and visual novels will also work.
Should be able to immediately see the type of processor you have, including its model number, speed, and number of cores.
If you open up the "components" branch and click "display" it should show you the name of your graphics card too.
Graphics card - mobile Intel(R) 4 series express chipset family
i hope i done this right!