Is This Gaming Computer Good For These Games?

I'm looking into trying to get a brand new desktop to replace the one I have currently. My current desktop is about 7 years old, runs on Vista, and every now and then, the PC runs very hard for no reason like it's about to die.

I've looked around on Amazon for some gaming computers that would seem to be able to play some of my favorite games, such as Skyrim and the upcoming Fallout 4, as well as some other games that wouldn't need much power, like Amnesia and Minecraft.

I don't really have a max price range, but I don't want to try to spend more than $1,500.

http://www.amazon.com/...HDFCZO1A84
http://www.amazon.com/...HDFCZO1A84

I'm not entirely sure if either of the two listed are of good quality for gaming, but I know it'll be much better than what I'm running at the moment. If they aren't, could anyone redirect me to a good gaming computer? That'd be lovely.

Fk gamez bro. Make a million bucks this da real game.

No i would suggest going with a pc that has a better graphics card like the gtx 960 because that pc will not be good for those games at anything higher the 720 and that might be pushing it if you want a pc i would advise http://www.amazon.com/...00I21HHE6/ this one

Laptop and Gaming, generally do not go together, wait another two or three years:
OR find a machine that has these…
Fallout 4 System Requirements (Speculative)
-OS: Windows Vista SP2 or Windows 7 or Windows 8 and above
-CPU: Intel Core i5-760 2.8GHz / Phenom II X4 970
-RAM: 8 GB System Memory
-GPU VRAM: 2GB
-GPU: Nvidia GeForce GTX 670 or AMD Radeon R9 280
-HDD: 28 GB Free Hard Drive Space
-DX: DirectX 11

SKYRIM SPECS:
Recommended Requirements
-Wndows 7/Vista/XP PC (32 or 64 bit)
-Quad-core Intel or AMD CPU processor
-4GB System RAM
-6GB free HDD (Hard disk drive) space
-DirectX 9.0c compatible NVIDIA or AMD ATI video card with 1GB of RAM: Nvidia GeForce GTX 260 or higher; ATI Radeon HD 4890 or higher
-DirectX compatible sound card

I would guess that all the Updates for Vista are using a lot of space.
Plus whatever malware/virus you picked up over the years are doing it in.
Five years is considered the useful life of a computer.