Recent Call of Duty releases are compatible with an A10 9600P.
Recent Call of Duty releases are compatible with an A10 9600P.
It won’t be a gaming laptop, yet you might achieve around 50-60 FPS on lower settings. An APU often performs better than a pure Intel processor without a dedicated GPU in certain titles.
Don't anticipate my Bristol Ridge A10 surpassing something on a dGPU. I wasn't certain if it's best to stick with older titles before 2012 or even before 2010. It seems like this is likely the kind of games I'll encounter. I thought, given this laptop's 1TB HDD and a more capable APU compared to the older machine my mom lent me (with an A8 6410 and 8GB RAM), it might make sense to play some different older games—like World of Warcraft and maybe TF2.
Actually, I didn't notice you mentioned playing at 768p only. That's fine. I also don't think you'd run into issues with BO2.
Because MW3 and BO2 are priced higher—about $20 more—I’d probably skip them and opt for the $20 titles instead. Fallout NV would cost $10 less if I chose the regular version, but I thought the DLC would add another $10 in value.
Fallout: NV ranks among my best five titles, and the DLC really adds value.