This is the inexpensive multi-region Blu-ray/DVD player that I bought seven years ago, when my old multi-region DVD player gave up the ghost, and it's served me well. You can even connect it with RCA jacks if you have an old-school TV without HDMI connectivity.
It plays any region DVD right off the bat, but you have to enter a code to change the Blu-ray region. I switched it over to Region B last week to watch a couple of U.K. releases, then switched it back to Region A to watch a domestic Blu-ray of
Baby Driver.
There have been very few discs that it won't play: a bootleg DVD-R here, an ancient VCD there. (It plays most VCDs.) In seven years of regular use, I can count the problem discs on the fingers of one hand. I recently had trouble with a borrowed Region B Blu-ray that kept on giving me the "This Blu-ray will only play in a Region B player" message, even after I switched the machine over to Region B. Maybe that's because I put it in when the player was still set to Region A, and that got stuck in its memory. That's the first time I've had any sort of problem playing a Region B Blu-ray, but it's a non-issue if you're only playing American and Japanese Region A Blu-rays.
rikkikow wrote:Yipes, it changed the region code to 2.
I don't know for sure about that. I may have had it already set to 2 because I have another external DVD which is a 1.
I wouldn't screw with your computers!
Back before I had a multi-region DVD player for my TV (15 or 16 years ago), I switched my MacBook over to Region 2 for Japanese stuff, but I just kept it there, since Apple only allows a limited number of region switches.