Hello and welcome to Tom's Hardware Forums.
First off, one post would have been enough - you have our attention now. 😀
Press your Windows key and R together and into the Open box that poops up, type dxdiag and press Enter. Let the scans run their course and see what the result is. Also, in Windows Explorer, run a system-wide search for file who's name includes the string "gina" (without the quotes) and if you have anything other then MSGINA or SHGINA, post back the name of it. If you only have those in the 386 folder, copy them into windows\system32, restart the system and see if that helped.