Yes it is they made the new Ps3 region free
No.
PSP consoles and games have regions, but the games are not region locked, you can play a game from the US on a console from the UK, for example. Movies however are region locked and can only be played on a PSP from the same region.
Yes Blu-rays have region codes. There are three regions, regions A, B, and C. The US is in Region A.
It aired as the Season Finale of Season Eight, May 23rd 2010. It was released on DVD December 22nd 2009, in Region 1, on December 26th, 2009 in Region 2 & on December 23rd, 2009 in Region 4. It was released on Bluray on December 22nd 2009 as part of a box set and was re-released as a stand alone Bluray on August 7th 2012.
There are no regions for ps3 games..? You buy a ps3 game in America, it should work on a ps3 in Britain. When it comes to bluray movies though, they are region locked. This is false because while right about the regions there are other factors and the PS3 USA games have been designed for a different television system and will not work in the UK's PAL TV System This is also why the PS3s are different for the different areas and the model numbers help to tell them apart USA model numbers end in 01 which covers North America The first North American PS3 was released there Nov 17, 2006 and the model number was CECHA01 SDTV region is NTSC Blu-ray Region is A DVD Region is 1 NTSC PS2 Region is NTSC-U/C and the PS1 Region is NTSC-US 03 is U.K. / Ireland and the first PS3 was released there on Mar 23, 2007 with model number of CECHC03. SDTV Region is PAL, Blu-ray Region is B, DVD Region is 2, PAL PS2 Region is PAL, & PS1 Region is PAL.
MOST PS3 games are region-free, meaning that you can import/export games from any region and they should work. There have been the odd issues though, such as The Simpsons Game - I don't think the American version of that works on the European PS3s. Blu-Ray movies, however, ARE region-encoded - so you must get Blu-Ray movies from whichever of the three regions your console is from.
Regions are global areas defined by the BluRay consortium. In order the allow the introduction of movies in different countries on different dates, most Bluray movies have a region code embedded in them. Bluray players will only play movies authored for the region in which they are sold. There are movies on the market, however, that are region-free, and can be played on any Bluray player anywhere in the world.
Regions are global areas defined by the BluRay consortium. In order the allow the introduction of movies in different countries on different dates, most Bluray movies have a region code embedded in them. Bluray players will only play movies authored for the region in which they are sold. There are movies on the market, however, that are region-free, and can be played on any Bluray player anywhere in the world.
A region 1 DVD is intended to be used in North America. Any BluRay player purchased in North America should play the disc. Bluray players from other regions such as Europe will be expecting to play discs marked with a different region code so are unlikely to pay a region 1 DVD.
Unlike DVDs, Bluray discs and most games, CDs are not region coded. CDs from any region will play in any player.
North America is classed as region 1 for DVD, Bluray and games coding. The codes are there specifically to prevent discs from one region being used in another. Region 2 covers Europe. There have been a handful of DVD players that did not check the region code and would play discs from any region. Bluray players appear to be far more tightly controlled and it is very unlikely that any commercially available player will allow the coding to be bypassed. It is possible that players can be modified to remove the coding restrictions but these are unofficial modifications, void warranties and cannot be guaranteed to work continuously. As frustrating as the region coding is, the easiest and lowest cost route to take is to buy discs intended for use on your own player. Note that as the region coding is a commercial protection, non commercial DVD and Bluray discs do not have the code and can be handled by any player. That is subject to the player and the television handling European 50Hz content. The US normally uses 60Hz video so there is still no guarantee that your specific setup will work. It's a case of studying the manuals to make sure.
DVDs have 6 region codes for different regions in the world which are used as a commercial protection. You may only watch the dvds in your specifically region easily. A region free player means you can also watch the dvds originally released in other regions. Some players are region free but it it sometimes possible to modify a player to make it region free
since games are as movies that have different regions, so does there are different swap magic regions so you need the swap magic region jp to play them
The four regions are the Nordic (Northern) region, the Southern region, the Western region, and the Eastern region.
DVD region code is a to protect the DVD producer, so there are 6 regions in the world, and when you play DVDs, your player's region should be the same with your DVDs. But some palyer software can be region free DVD player software(Easy DVD Player)
Brazil is divided into five regions: North Region Northeast Region Central-West Region Southeast Region South Region
PSP consoles and games have regions, but the games are not region locked, you can play a game from the US on a console from the UK, for example. Movies however are region locked and can only be played on a PSP from the same region.
There are 12 land regions in the state of Maine. The 4 main regions are, Somerset County Region, Androscoggin Region, York County Region, and Washington County Region.