I found some laptops, all with more or less the same vitals, with that graphics chip:
Acer Aspire AS5536-5883 ($499.99) - looks like best deal, tied for largest screen
Gateway NV5215u ($599.99)
HP Pavilion dv3-1075us ($749.99)
HP Pavilion dv4-1220us ($749.99)
And one with essentially identical specs AND what I've read is a better card (and have used, and am certain would be more than sufficient for running Uru):
Acer Aspire AS6920-6898 ($649.99)
For comparison, the GeForce 9800M GTS-equipped Gateway P-7807u is $1199.99. Good performance but you have to pay for it.
I'd just go on eBay and see what the Dell XPS m1330 and 1350s etc. are selling for - a while back I knew a guy who was trying to sell his and nobody took it at the price he was asking, so you don't quite have to abide by the store prices. Stores are really trying not to drop prices on laptops with "luxury" 3D graphics, I guess.
That's about as far as I can go - many GeForce 8x00- and 9X00-level cards were rebranded by GeForce with names like GeForce GT 120M, and I don't have a clue what they correspond to, but it's a safe bet the 120M is a cheap-o card (though that one seems to be still better than the part you mentioned.
I would likely say no to that laptop - if you can find a laptop with a GeForce 8600M GT (now known as the 9500M GS) cheaper, then the lower-performance (if what I read
here is correct) HD3200 is a bit of a scam. It's worth it for being $100 cheaper though. That said, for my money the graphics card is the most important part of any gaming laptop since the other components won't be a problem nearly as quickly - when the graphics are outdated, and they get that way fairly quickly, you can't do anything to fix it. More on that in a bit.
The talk about a "dedicated" graphics card is sometimes misleading when talking about laptops, and in this case it is ("hypermemory") and isn't (this "card" is indeed integrated if what I've read is true).
On a desktop computer, you have two paths for graphics: One, you can use the graphics supplied on the motherboard's chipset (usually Intel integrated graphics), or you can plug in a "dedicated" graphics card.
On laptops, space means you're stuck with what comes in the laptop, integrated or dedicated doesn't really matter. There are a very few laptops and cards built using the MXM format (which governs size and thermal characteristics) out there, but it's not very well standardized and you can't rely upon it. That said, from what I read this HD3200 is indeed an "integrated" solution not built internally in its own card format - bolted right onto the mainboard with a minimum of extras. It has no RAM of its own, though otherwise it should be functionally just like any other non-MXM laptop solution.
That "hypermemory" is deceiving; it's just shared memory, which means that the design is rather cheap and doesn't have its own dedicated video memory. Dedicated video memory is somewhat important, in a laptop or otherwise. The card won't ever be all 2GB of RAM, probably not even 512MB (which is what I've seen it being listed as); more to the point, if you're already using a lot of RAM in the operating system it won't be available to the card (although I doubt Uru will ever use 2GB, even if you're keeping some internet browser windows open in the background).
Ultimately though, it doesn't sound like a bad card, and has dedicated HD video decoding (very helpful on lower-end PCs and just in general) but you want it to be in a system that's much cheaper than something with the GeForce 8600M GT, for just one example.