thnx guys for the list,and special thanx to Slasher
i know my Gfx Card is Crap "i said that in the first post"
i have some of games that on the list Such as Age of empiers 2, i also have ARMY man R.T.S And CS1.6 " i'm sure that games not need very good Gfx card"
But i'm wondering why would you say the computer is better than l aptops on games, as you know, new laptops such as Dell Alienware, it got what New games needs to run so smooth,but of course it costs allot
BTW Minecraft works just fine when i play in lower setting and where can i have NFS games that works with My laptop? " torrent file will be nice"
finally what do you recommend me for a good gaming computer costs about 800$
thanx for all how replay on this topic
Part of the issue is mostly the laptops, in order to deal with space and power issues as well as cooling, have to sacrifice in certain areas. The reason Desktops, for the most part, are going to do better in this case is that when you look at the system requirements for some of the current GPUs, there is a Power supply wattage requirement. They pull extra power that most system boards do not provide to allow the GPU to crunch the calculations a bit faster and alleviate the load on a CPU.
Unfortunately, there is no gaming computer that would be reasonable at $800. I would not recommend getting a cheap computer and try to stick a GPU into it for a few reasons:
1) Some of the cheaper computers will not have a nice PCIe slot available.
2) Cheaper computers will not sport 400+ Watt power supplies. Some GPUs will require a minimum of 450+ Watt power supply to work properly.
3) Most cheaper computers will be Mini-Tower or small form factor designs. If you look at some of the decent, cheap GPUs, you may have a space issue in order to fit them inside these cases.
4) Cooling in some of these computers might not be up to par.
5) Some of the CPUs are on the low end, so you may suffer more than just a lack of a good GPU in them.
I know this is probably what you don't want to hear, at least, for some of the more 'recent' games. However, you can probably eek out something with Minecraft, as it doesn't really focus too hard on a really good GPU (Never played minecraft, but what little I saw, it shouldn't require a crazy good GPU to work.)
Your next best option is to 'frankenstein' a computer... Purchase by parts and work your way up, but your main consideration should be with a good power supply, at least 500W, but shoot for like 600W to cover your bases, a decent tower case with several fans for cooling, a fairly newish Motherboard to support most of the current and new cpus. From there, you can get a relatively decent i5 core or AMD Phenom chip, a Hard drive, DVD rom drive and Windows 7 and build a computer from there. (Well, add memory and keyboard, monitor and mouse)
With that in mind, you have the option to get a better CPU later along with an ok GPU or update the GPU as you can afford. But that is the best you can really do at the lowball end.