The CPU is fine.

RAM, probably fine, most games target 8 GB system RAM because that's what most systems use and you can always tune down e.g. textures anyway.

That's an *extremely* weak graphics card that was not really suitable for more than casual gaming when it was released. Graphics requirements are *very* scalable, and you can probably tune screen resolution, texture resolution and detail down enough to make the game playable for you; but it's not going to be a good experience. It's comparable to an intel HD 4400 (integrated) GPU (which was minimum spec for divinity original sin).

If you want to play games, do yourself a favour and get a decent graphics card, it makes a huge difference. In 2011 I bought a HD 6870, now retired; it cost about 150 euros at the time. This card is still reasonable, about 10 times faster than what you have. If you're on a very tight budget and you have a decent power supply already in the machine and you can fit a full sized card, you can find a used HD6870, 560 ti, or 650 ti for about 40 euros on ebay or local equivalent. If you don't have a reasonable power supply (one or less PCI-E connectors or not enough amps on the 12 V), and you're on a tight budget, your best bet is to get a low end card at retail for about 100-150 eur (e.g. the 750 ti, which does not need a PCI-E connector at all and is slightly faster than the 6870).

A 10x difference is like the difference between 720p without AF at 30 FPS and 1440p (4x number of pixels) at 60 FPS (2x number of pixels) with 16x AF (the performance hit is negligible on a modern GPU, but in a bandwidth-limited scenario you might take a small hit). It takes a game that's barely playable to you now and makes it comfortably playable.

Last edited by Markus G; 20/09/15 04:19 PM. Reason: ETA