You have an x16 PCIe slot and PCIe versions are backwards compatible so you don't have to worry about that.
Typically you will want to make sure your power supply is sufficient and your case has the room to fit the video card. But the cheap low power video cards like the one you posted are meant to be compatible with just about any system.
That said I hope you don't buy the one you linked especially if it's for gaming. Go for a GT 1030 or RX 550 if you want to play games.
What were you planning on using this video card for?
If the GPU needs a PCIe slot and your motherboard has one, then there's a ~99% chance they'll be compatible... that's the whole point of having standards: apart from the occasional deviations, you can nearly anything to just work with little to no fuss.
You have an x16 PCIe slot and PCIe versions are backwards compatible so you don't have to worry about that.
Typically you will want to make sure your power supply is sufficient and your case has the room to fit the video card. But the cheap low power video cards like the one you posted are meant to be compatible with just about any system.
That said I hope you don't buy the one you linked especially if it's for gaming. Go for a GT 1030 or RX 550 if you want to play games.
What were you planning on using this video card for?
You have an x16 PCIe slot and PCIe versions are backwards compatible so you don't have to worry about that.
Typically you will want to make sure your power supply is sufficient and your case has the room to fit the video card. But the cheap low power video cards like the one you posted are meant to be compatible with just about any system.
That said I hope you don't buy the one you linked especially if it's for gaming. Go for a GT 1030 or RX 550 if you want to play games.
What were you planning on using this video card for?
games, now i do not have a video card, i have a processor that has integrated video card