Bear in mind that some games won't run on integrated Intel HD Graphics GPUs because they were made in a time when integrated graphics cards were absolute crap, and they still recognize contemporary ones as if being the ones at the time of their release.
I know for a fact that Legacy of Kain: Defiance, for instance, simply won't start on some modern Intel HD Graphics cards because it requires Hardware T&L (something pretty much ALL cards, integrated or not, have supported for quite some time -- it was introduced to the consumer market way back in 1999), and most integrated GPUs at the time of its release simply didn't support it. The game basically assumes that it won't be able to run because you're trying to play it on an integrated graphics card and those couldn't run it when it released. Some Intel HD Graphics cards made today bypass this by pinging the game with "wrong" information, telling it they're *not* integrated chipsets. Others don't, and the game won't run, even if the GPU is more than capable of running it with everything maxed out.
Then again, you'd have to be pretty unlucky to come across such a situation, so don't get scared. It's just a minor heads-up.
[EDIT] Also, I played Batman: Arkham Asylum on an Intel Graphics integrated GPU just fine (with most graphical/video options on "medium", mind you), and that card was way worse than the one you have, so you should be OK even when it comes to *some* games made today.
My GOG versions of both Darksiders Warmastered Edition and Darksiders II Deathinitive Edition run really well even on my laptop with its crappy old Intel HD Graphics card (again, some options have to be turned down for a smoother gameplay experience, but they *do* run and are quite playable, if one doesn't mind a lower resolution).
Post edited August 10, 2017 by groze