Why? The chip couldn't handle the new Windows Display Driver Model (WDDM) 1.1 properly. To get the Aero Glass interface—the signature visual of Windows 7—the driver needed to support WDDM 1.1 features like GPU context switching and accurate memory management. Intel fudged it. The official driver enabled Aero, but it was a house of cards.
But in 2009, Windows 7 64-bit arrived, promising to unlock more than 4GB of RAM—a necessity for any modern PC. The problem? The GMA 3100’s driver stack was a 32-bit dinosaur in a 64-bit world. intel gma 3100 driver windows 7 64-bit
And that, in the depths of a 2009 forum thread marked "SOLVED" (with no solution posted), is the real story. Intel fudged it
The Intel GMA 3100 was never meant to be a performer. Launched in 2007 with the Bearlake (G31/G33/G35) chipsets, its silicon soul was a slightly tweaked GMA 3000. No hardware transform & lighting (T&L). No shader model 3.0 in hardware—just a slow, CPU-crushed emulation. Its VRAM was stolen from system RAM. It was made for Excel, not explosions. The problem
Intel officially declared the GMA 3100 "legacy" for Windows 7. The last driver ever released for 64-bit was version (sometimes listed as 15.12.75.64.1930), dated roughly mid-2009. After that? Silence.