Use your 32–bit applications
Apple stopped supporting 32–bit apps, but they still run in High Sierra
32–bit games such as 3D Mini Golf can’t run on modern Macs, but High Sierra has you covered.
UNFORTUNATELY, IN COMPUTING, nothing lasts forever. When 32–bit processors gave way to the more efficient 64–bit chips, it was inevitable software written for 32–bit CPUs would eventually be abandoned. It was a long time coming on the Mac. If you bought a Mac in 2007 or later it’s likely to have a 64-bit processor, but support for 32-bit apps wasn’t dropped until the release of macOS 10.15 Catalina in 2019. That’s a very generous window for developers to get their apps in order.
Which Macs will run macOS High Sierra?
macOS 13 High Sierra was a performance release. That is, it was primarily designed to solidify its security and polish the performance rather than introduce new features. You can install it on any Mac that ran its predecessor, Sierra, though its successor, Mojave, left a lot of Macs behind. The Macs that can run High Sierra are as follows:
Mac (Late 2009 or later) MacBook (Late 2009 or later) MacBook Air (Late 2010 or later) MacBook Pro (Mid 2010 or later) Mac mini (Mid 2010 or later) iMac Pro (2017)
Mac Pro (Mid 2010 or later)
It needs an Intel processor, at least 2GB of memory and 20.12GB of available disk space.