Okay, with an emo title like that, I'm sure I'll get responses. But it pretty much is true. Here's the deal:
My computer my dad gave me won't play games. (simple enough) But, when I ran dxdiag, this comes up for the display:
I don't understand how it could say n/a for the graphics card.
I would like to download the drivers for my graphics card, but I can't figure out what it is. It says the default graphics card on my computer case is
"ATI Radeon X200 IGP"
so I downloaded the drivers for that, but nothing changed after I installed them. So I'm guessing that's not the graphics card I have. I tried opening my computer, but the graphics card isn't labeled. Another thing I've tried is using the "Aida" program, which just identifies all the hardware on my computer, and that doesn't know my motherboards name, and nothing shows up about my graphics card at all.
So maybe I do have integrated graphics like the sticker on my case says, but it's not exactly that kind. Why can't anything identify my graphics card? Please help me, and thanks for reading this if you did.
Oh wait, here's a screenshot of the Aida program:
My computer my dad gave me won't play games. (simple enough) But, when I ran dxdiag, this comes up for the display:

I don't understand how it could say n/a for the graphics card.
I would like to download the drivers for my graphics card, but I can't figure out what it is. It says the default graphics card on my computer case is
"ATI Radeon X200 IGP"
so I downloaded the drivers for that, but nothing changed after I installed them. So I'm guessing that's not the graphics card I have. I tried opening my computer, but the graphics card isn't labeled. Another thing I've tried is using the "Aida" program, which just identifies all the hardware on my computer, and that doesn't know my motherboards name, and nothing shows up about my graphics card at all.
So maybe I do have integrated graphics like the sticker on my case says, but it's not exactly that kind. Why can't anything identify my graphics card? Please help me, and thanks for reading this if you did.
Oh wait, here's a screenshot of the Aida program:
