Should I use PAL or NTSC?

Which format you should use mostly depends on your location and that of your viewers, as you can see in the map below. If you’re producing videos that will be viewed globally, NTSC is a safer choice by default – most PAL VCRs and DVD players can play NTSC video, whereas NTSC players generally can’t play PAL video.

Does PAL work in Australia?

PAL is the standard broadcast format in Europe, Australia, and parts of Asia.

Does PAL or NTSC matter anymore?

The only things that matter are the frame rate and the resolution. Videos and movies are stored on DVDs with different frame rates – 24, 25, or 30 FPS; as well as in different resolutions – 720 x 480 pixels for NTSC DVDs and 720 x 576 pixels for PAL ones.

What countries use PAL or NTSC?

PAL is optimised for TVs in Europe, Thailand, Russia, Australia, Singapore, China, the Middle East etc.. NTSC is optimised for TVs in the USA, Canada, Japan, S. Korea, Mexico etc..

Did Australia use NTSC?

‘NTSC’ is often used as the convenient name for the current North American television system. PAL is used in Australia.

Is NTSC obsolete?

Today, however, NTSC and PAL standards are mostly obsolete. Because most broadcasting and other video content is now digital, we don’t have to worry about these limitations anymore. Digital broadcasting has advantages over older analog standards, such as more efficient use of bandwidth and less signal interference.