The outlet isn't the only problem here.Before the DTV switchover there were three standards for televisions: NTSC, PAL and SECAM. NTSC was in the US and Korea, PAL in most of Europe, SECAM in France, Russia and the Middle East. Unless you had a multisystem TV, you couldn't watch American TV on a German TV set.Now there are six different standards. I don't know why. It still means you can't watch TV in the US on a European TV set.
Maybe... most modern equipment will operate on 90V - 260V so it's worth checking before buying a voltage converter for it. If the DVD player is 120V, that suggests that it is North American and will play NTSC standard discs. Using it on a 240V region means it is likely that it will be in a PAL zone. THerefore, discs bought locally may not work because of regional codings, because of the difference between PAL and NTSC and because the display may not be able to handle NTSC. Some DVD players will play any standard (NTSC or PAL) and some displays will also handle either standard. A handful of players do not have region codes either. It is worth a little more research before you assume that the DVD player will perform as you hope.
NTSC
Ntsc
V10
NTSC-uk was created in 2001.
You can not unless you have the full version
No
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You can just download some file from the net. Click donwload then convert from PAL to NTSC or from NTSC to PAL.
The American game restriction is not only NTSC for PS2 games and other countries have NTSC games that are not playable in American PS2 consoles
sorry, no you can not. NTSC is a format that can only be played on a NTSC console. NTSC and PAL are two different coding methods. NTSC is coded for the North America and South America. pal is coded for across seas.
no cause its ntsc
yes it works