PAL: Difference between revisions

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[[File:PAL-NTSC-SECAM.png|thumb|400px|Regions of the world which used the different encoding systems]]
[[File:PAL-NTSC-SECAM.png|thumb|400px|Regions of the world which used the different encoding systems]]
{{art-wikipedia}}
{{art-wikipedia}}
Within the video game community, '''PAL''' is a term used to refer to the region of Europe, most of Asia (minus Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and the Philippines), Africa, most of South America, and Australia. The term comes from the analog television encoding system '''Phase Alternate Line''', which was the primary method of encoding analog TV for these parts of the world. This is opposed to [[NTSC]], which is the standard used in North America and smaller parts of South America and Asia.
Within the video game community, '''PAL''' is a term used to refer to the region of Europe, most of Asia (minus Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and the Philippines), Africa, more than half of South America, and Australia. The term comes from the analog television encoding system '''Phase Alternate Line''', which was the primary method of encoding analog TV for these parts of the world. This is opposed to [[NTSC]], which is the standard used in North America and smaller parts of South America and Asia.


There are numerous differences between PAL and NTSC as television formats, but the main difference which affected video games was their refresh rates. NTSC TVs run at 60 hertz (meaning the image refreshes 60 times per second), while PAL TVs only run at 50 hertz (50 refreshes per second), meaning that, unless adjusted to account for the refresh rate, PAL runs at 5/6th the speed of NTSC. An alternative standard that runs PAL at 60 hertz was later developed, so the difference between the formats primarily became their different methods of encoding.
There are numerous differences between PAL and NTSC as television formats, but the main difference which affected video games was their refresh rates. NTSC TVs run at 60 hertz (meaning the image refreshes 60 times per second), while PAL TVs only run at 50 hertz (50 refreshes per second), meaning that, unless adjusted to account for the refresh rate, PAL runs at 5/6th the speed of NTSC. An alternative standard that runs PAL at 60 hertz was later developed, so the difference between the formats primarily became their different methods of encoding.
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