Region 1 DVD's. As far as I know, all other formats are not supported on most players in the US. However, there may be players that can play more than Region 1 DVD's in the US.
DVDs which are encoded as Region 4 are compatible in Australia
It is on Amazon.com, link provided below.
No, a Canadian format DVD, which typically uses NTSC, will not work in a PAL format DVD player. PAL and NTSC are two different video formats with incompatible encoding systems. To play a Canadian NTSC DVD on a PAL player, you would need a multi-format or region-free DVD player that supports both formats.
No, they are two different regional format. Unless you have an all Region DVD Player which is not available anywhere. Your computer might be able to play these Japanese DVDs but you have to change the regional format of your computer to region 2. Setback is you cannot play Region 1 anymore on your computer.
18th of August in the Americas (Region 1) September 28th in Region 2 format.
It's a region code, indicating that particular DVD is intended for the market in Southeast Asia. Generally speaking, DVD's produced for one region won't work on players in another - although some DVD players can be set up to play DVD's in any format.
Because DVDs are Region coded and come with other variations in DVD format.
Most DvD players and TVs sold in PAL countries can play both format of discs
The best format is Blu-Ray DVD disks, but the most common disk is a standard DVD disk.
dvd-rw
where can i find choirboys in dvd format