ID:277870
 
Hey I have a question on dual core CPUs. A lot of computer games have specs still don't cover dual core under the system requirements.

So when I buy a PC game, especally a older one, sometimes it is hard for me to decide if I can play it or not. How do I figure this out?

I have a dual core Pentium 1.73GHZ system. Now, how can I compare that to games that ask for a P4? How can I compare that to system requirements when looking at the back of the box?
Usualy the processor is the least important part of the hardware when it comes to running a game. But if the game is old enough that it doesnt cover dual cores, you can go ahead and assume that a dual core can run it
The two potential problems you may run into are games running too slow, or games running too quickly. In most cases manually setting the processor affinity to 1/all cores resolves it.

Otherwise just ask before you buy it, make sure to note the salespersons name and a general description, so if you can't get it to work you can take it back and say "[Name] assured me that it would run with X-core processors".
A multi-cored machine is still able to play single-threaded games and applications; the games will just pick a core and run on it.

Newer games, like the updated Valve Source Engine (HL2, TF2, etc), and the Unreal Tournament 3 engine, take full advantage of multiple cores and will utilize them for play.

If a game asks for a Pentium 4, it's usually a safe bet that anything dual-core from either AMD or Intel made in the past two or so years will be fine.

[EDIT]

Certain games FREAK OUT with multiple cores, but most all have been patched/hacked into working correctly nowadays. I have no encountered anything I cannot run correctly due to multiple cores.

~Kujila