Why is Sonic Faster in America? NTSC vs PAL/60Hz vs 50Hz | Nostalgia Nerd

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
  • What is NTSC? What is PAL? Why in Sonic fast in America? Why is he slow in Europe? Perhaps the question should be more like Why is 60hz faster than 50hz?... and why is there a difference? Because that's exactly what this video is about. Back in the days of analogue television (you remember that, right?), signals were transmitted using 2 main standards, PAL and NTSC (There's also SECAM for France and Russia, which is similar to PAL), and to display on these standards, your equipment needed to be able to output the right signal type. OPEN FOR MORE
    This is partly why a Sega Genesis won't work properly in the UK without modifications and vice versa. This video looks at the whole caboodle, what NTSC is, what PAL is, why we have 60hz and 50hz, where it came from, who came up with those figures and exactly what all this means when it comes to Sonic the Hedgehog.
    By the way, PAL stands for Phase Altering Line. NTSC stands for National Television Standards Committee; the people who came up with the name. I always prefer it when acronyms refer to the technology rather than the people who decided on the specification.
    Please note. The Megadrive 68000 CPU clock speed is actually 7.600489 MHz, hence why that calculation doesn't quite pan out properly. Apparently rounding wasn't a strong point of my source reference. Likewise, my pro-active checking wasn't a strong point of that part of the video.
    Video topics;
    NTSC Explained
    PAL Explained
    50hz vs 60hz
    NTSC vs PAL
    Why is Sonic fast in America
    What is Sonic slow in Europe
    Megadrive Region modifications
    NTSC Region mod
    PAL Region mod
    Other games slower on PAL
    PAL optimised games
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Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @Horzuhammer
    @Horzuhammer 8 лет назад +1342

    Short answer; They didn't bother to optimize the game for PAL-regions.

    • @Nostalgianerd
      @Nostalgianerd  8 лет назад +173

      That is indeed a short answer. A little hollow and lacking meat & context, but whatever floats yer boat.

    • @Horzuhammer
      @Horzuhammer 8 лет назад +41

      Nostalgia Nerd
      I indeed prefered your long version, but I didn't own a MegaDrive as a kid, and had gotten used to the 60hz version with emulators, so when I finally bought the real thing, I was kinda disappointed.

    • @Gambit771
      @Gambit771 8 лет назад +35

      Nostalgia Nerd That's what a short answer is, lacking in meat but doesn't make it shallow and he is right.

    • @shaneg9081
      @shaneg9081 8 лет назад +29

      "Short answer; They didn't bother to optimize the game for PAL-regions."
      Actually, the short answer is that they really optimized for PAL regions. PAL just did its best to not to be optimal for gaming.

    • @Horzuhammer
      @Horzuhammer 8 лет назад +6

      Shane G How do you mean? You can't find a separate PAL romfile for Sonic, since it used the same rom all over the world.

  • @SSteelification
    @SSteelification 8 лет назад +173

    Hearing the theme in the PAL region version was painful to listen to.

    • @snetmotnosrorb3946
      @snetmotnosrorb3946 5 лет назад +8

      You should try some other songs in PAL speed, most are actually better. Particularly Labyrinth and bosses imo. ruclips.net/video/D_ZOZlxFTmU/видео.html I also like Marble and Spring Yard. Green hill zone is probably the worst slowed down.

    • @PartyDude_19
      @PartyDude_19 5 лет назад +18

      As an American it feels very painful to listen to

    • @blacksunshine7485
      @blacksunshine7485 5 лет назад +4

      I can imagine it being tough for you ntsc dudes. It is for most of us pals now too

    • @blacksunshine7485
      @blacksunshine7485 5 лет назад +6

      @@snetmotnosrorb3946 Labyrinth and star light PAL all day baby

    • @TheRealBlazingDiamond
      @TheRealBlazingDiamond 5 лет назад +3

      Imagine Hill Top Zone, but slower.

  • @eastbeast1379
    @eastbeast1379 8 лет назад +194

    That explains why sometimes I had the fast gameplay and the slow gameplay on Sonic Mega Collection.Sometimes I would select 50Hz instead of 60Hz as I had no idea about it when I was younger.

    • @Nostalgianerd
      @Nostalgianerd  8 лет назад +52

      Yeah, me too. Thinking back, that option appeared quite a lot.

    • @robbenfan1792
      @robbenfan1792 8 лет назад +3

      Todd East haha same

    • @theobserver4214
      @theobserver4214 6 лет назад +2

      EastBeast13 I thought it would always be 50hz on PAL copies? My NTSC-U copy doesn't have those options.

    • @snetmotnosrorb3946
      @snetmotnosrorb3946 5 лет назад +7

      @Blank Blank Only PAL consoles have the option of switching to 60 hz. 50 hz is standard. On Gamecube you must hold down B during the startup.

    • @RadioTails
      @RadioTails 4 года назад +5

      @@theobserver4214 The GameCube PAL version is interesting because they include the NTSC and PAL version of the roms. Although they were lazy and kept the US Manuals.
      Selecting 60 Hz would play the NTSC roms and play like they do on the Japan/USA version. Playing Sonic 3D Flickies' Island actually loads the NTSC title Sonic 3D Blast in 60 Hz, despite the game selection displaying the PAL title.
      Selecting 50 Hz would play the PAL roms, and run slower (Sonic 1) or at an optimized speed (Sonic 2, 3, etc). However, the image is actually stretched. While this does remove the black boards, it looks awful and pixelated. Just stick with the 60 Hz option.
      Now the Xbox and PS2 Plus versions threw the 60 Hz option out the window, and the games use the PAL roms running at 50 Hz. I'm not sure if the image is stretched know, but I really don't care to buy a copy to find out.

  • @SomeOrangeCat
    @SomeOrangeCat 8 лет назад +437

    I'm gonna go out on a limb and guess that "Blast processing" wasn't a buzz term used in the PAL territories then.

    • @ChristopherSobieniak
      @ChristopherSobieniak 8 лет назад +8

      I bet!

    • @Nostalgianerd
      @Nostalgianerd  8 лет назад +100

      Nope. It was not. You'd imagine then, it was even harder to argue the Mega Drive vs SNES case in our playgrounds.

    • @SomeOrangeCat
      @SomeOrangeCat 8 лет назад +40

      Nostalgia Nerd Over here, at least where I went to school, the arguments were usually ended by either "Do you have Final Fantasy 3?" or "My Mortal Kombat has blood!". Fairly even battles here.

    • @ChristopherSobieniak
      @ChristopherSobieniak 8 лет назад +3

      Nostalgia Nerd Oh I bet. Those were such heated battles here!

    • @ChristopherSobieniak
      @ChristopherSobieniak 8 лет назад +2

      Andrew Vrba So, looking elsewhere for reasons to own said system I see, fair.

  • @philscomputerlab
    @philscomputerlab 8 лет назад +200

    These old consoles are easy to mod. I remember soldering in a simple switch in our PAL Mega Drive. And boom, it ran at 60 Hz :)

    • @michaellyga4726
      @michaellyga4726 8 лет назад +39

      You got robbed 10 hz I was robbed 100 lines. :P

    • @televisionandcheese
      @televisionandcheese 8 лет назад +13

      Had a 'merican genesis in UK, it didn't work with any of the TVs. :(

    • @rerolledDK
      @rerolledDK 8 лет назад +48

      Because most games were designed for NTSC, PAL gamers didn't even get to benefit from those extra 100 lines. Those extra lines just ended up as black borders on the top and bottom of the screen, with a squished picture in between.

    • @Megalocade
      @Megalocade 5 лет назад +2

      @@televisionandcheese I have a US genesis and never have any issues, it would of worked if you had an RGB Scart Cable and a tv which has a scart socket, most tvs in the early 90s only ran proper NTSC in colour through the Scart socket if you were trying to use composite or RF then it would of only given you a black and white crosshatch picture if any picture at all if it was very early 90s.
      I have a 1989 Sony trinitron 14"TV doesn't except ntsc through the AV inputs on the front or through RF, So I use RGB Scart it works perfectly with all my NTSC retro consoles

    • @deanfox3067
      @deanfox3067 4 года назад

      television and cheese it won’t, because your TV was only 50hz, the Genesis was 60hz.

  • @Doperooni
    @Doperooni 8 лет назад +559

    European Sonic should have been called Sub-Sonic the hedgehog.

    • @Krisztian5HUN
      @Krisztian5HUN 8 лет назад +11

      or Sonic HD

    • @ItsLeavee
      @ItsLeavee 8 лет назад +8

      Even better Sonic 4

    • @numanuma20
      @numanuma20 8 лет назад

      Krisztian5HUN ???

    • @girlsdrinkfeck
      @girlsdrinkfeck 8 лет назад +9

      he means cuz pal has superior video quality

    • @electronman32k
      @electronman32k 7 лет назад +12

      even though pal did have a higher resolution games like sonic were never optimised for this which is why you have black bars on the top and bottom of the screen where you should be getting more pixels than the ntsc versions but dont sadly :(

  • @RocketeerRaccoon
    @RocketeerRaccoon 8 лет назад +240

    I say I'm a Brit who used to love playing Sonic back in the day and I would never want to go back playing at 50hz.

    • @SproutyPottedPlant
      @SproutyPottedPlant 8 лет назад +15

      RocketeerRaccoon yup, the 60hz modded Megadrive gets used most, the 50hz ones collect dust.

    • @Sukuraidogai
      @Sukuraidogai 7 лет назад +24

      Because Europeans were so stuck up about PAL being better than NTSC they forget that the frame rate is more important than a minuscule resolution increase.

    • @RocketeerRaccoon
      @RocketeerRaccoon 7 лет назад +17

      Yeah, thank god this isn't a thing anymore now that TV's don't do that sort of thing anymore.

    • @SproutyPottedPlant
      @SproutyPottedPlant 7 лет назад +6

      Sukuraidogai ermmm no.

    • @Sukuraidogai
      @Sukuraidogai 7 лет назад +5

      Knuckles the Echidna ermmmmm yes.

  • @p1nkfreud
    @p1nkfreud 5 лет назад +21

    Most emulators don't "run at 50hz by default", they auto-detect the rom's letter region. You can override this of course. But modern emulators auto detect

  • @YogurtRed
    @YogurtRed 7 лет назад +42

    Oh shit now I understand why the youtube videos of the music sounded faster than I remembered

    • @snetmotnosrorb3946
      @snetmotnosrorb3946 5 лет назад +3

      Here's a playlist of your childhood ruclips.net/video/_r8NJnzzzRY/видео.html

  • @Mairusu
    @Mairusu 8 лет назад +45

    Great video man. I always had a gut feeling something was different between the versions, but not to this degree! I feel robbed ;L

    • @nd35780
      @nd35780 8 лет назад

      Hello, Mairusuuuuu!!! Question, have you beaten Muffet, yet?

  • @kargaroc386
    @kargaroc386 8 лет назад +8

    Before the advent of video games, PAL 50 was considered superior to NTSC.
    SECAM was different from PAL in that, besides the monochrome part of the signal, it was completely different.
    PAL and NTSC both used AM for color encoding. It takes three signals to get color, one of which is the monochrome signal. The other two are encoded in AM, interleaved within another, and transmitted inside the monochrome signal. PAL also inverts the color every other scan-line so that errors would cancel out, which NTSC doesn't do.
    SECAM used narrow band FM color, with both color signals laid beside one another, and then transmitted inside the monochrome signal.
    The thing with SECAM though, is that old computers could easily fake the NTSC/PAL color signal using simple circuits, and get color that much easier. SECAM on the other hand was more complex, and SECAM versions of old computers / consoles often had poor colors.

  • @jamiewindsor
    @jamiewindsor 5 лет назад +20

    Sonic's meant to be fast?

    • @daltonharmon1018
      @daltonharmon1018 3 года назад

      Bro I thought he was supposed to be slow considering the walking speed in lost world

  • @Sotirisdim8
    @Sotirisdim8 8 лет назад +19

    I can honestly say, things got better after SCART was introduced

    • @TheBytegeist
      @TheBytegeist 8 лет назад +3

      Before the PS2 and GameCube, most PAL Dreamcast games already had a 50/60 Hz selection screen. At that time (late 90s), 60 Hz capable PAL TVs were already quite common, at least in Germany.

    • @KRAFTWERK2K6
      @KRAFTWERK2K6 8 лет назад +2

      Yeah, playing PAL 60 Hertz games on the dreamcast on a 100hertz TV set was fucking awesome :D

  • @AidanRatnage
    @AidanRatnage 8 лет назад +84

    I'm in the UK and on PS2, when playing Sonic Heroes, you had to select top use 60 or 50MHz.

    • @CASTCorp
      @CASTCorp 8 лет назад +2

      I know this is unrelated, but on the Wii you can pick as well

    • @WeeeWeeeification
      @WeeeWeeeification 8 лет назад +1

      They don't even get he test button elsewhere xD 60Hz peasants

    • @MrWarmo
      @MrWarmo 8 лет назад +5

      Moving from the PS2 and Gamecube, a lot of games supported this, no idea if it was because more TVs supporting both standards I have no idea, even if some games diddnt ask, if u held buttons on start up it might let you change to, it was a very wierd time, but those consoles diddnt have the same slowdown issues though...

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro 8 лет назад

      You do on taito legends 2 and some other games including Dreamcast games. Most modern PAL TVs are probably 60HZ now.

    • @theSato
      @theSato 8 лет назад +13

      60hz master racers* :^)

  • @Astfgl
    @Astfgl 7 лет назад +7

    11:47 Hah, that's a picture I once took of my own Mega Drive. Fun to see it and the article I wrote about the single switch mod pop up in a video like this. Also thanks for giving credit. :)

  • @NunofYerbizness
    @NunofYerbizness 8 лет назад +5

    I just noticed that it's messed up that Europe has slower video games (60fps over here, 50fps over there), but they have faster movies/tv shows (24fps over here, 25fps over there).

    • @marcusdamberger
      @marcusdamberger 2 года назад

      It was more common in PAL regions to simply take a film and speed it up by one frame per second, from 24fps to 25fps as a quick and dirty method (rather effective) to match the video framerate from films 24. They then shift the audio pitch down slightly. But the result was a film that ran 4.1% faster, run time wise versus what was seen in the theater. Seems hardly noticeable, but the result could have interesting changes for media. If a film that took three sides of a laserdisc set in NTSC, it often only took two sides on a PAL region laserdisc because the timing was just short enough to fit onto a single laserdisc, or just two sides.

  • @darklinggolem
    @darklinggolem 7 лет назад +9

    Nowadays:
    Power: 100v-240v 50hz only or 60hz only!!
    TV's: 50-60Hz (No Conversion Required)

  • @ZamuelAtari
    @ZamuelAtari 8 лет назад +19

    Great video, but the interlace description is not entirely correct. It's true on regular TV programs that they use interlace, but not on older game consoles. They output the video to the SAME line on each frame and don't alternate between them. That's why you can see a black line between each line on older systems.
    This also makes the game look better on a PAL TV than on a NTSC since the resolution seems to be higher. You have more lines so the black lines you always see on an NTSC TV is not so visible on a PAL.
    One benefit with PAL is that since the frequency is slower, you also get more processor speed for each frame. So a processor intensive game will run smoother on a PAL system.

    • @LifeOnEarth
      @LifeOnEarth 8 лет назад +3

      Sonic 2's split screen multiplayer uses interlacing. The doubled vertical resolution conveniently squishes everything to make room for 2 screens.

  • @nateholt429
    @nateholt429 8 лет назад +48

    It's the blast processing O.o

    • @MaoRatto
      @MaoRatto 8 лет назад +2

      PAL sucks. T_T

    • @girlsdrinkfeck
      @girlsdrinkfeck 8 лет назад +2

      pal is superior ,all american tv shows look blurry and low colour

    • @AlexOjideagu2
      @AlexOjideagu2 8 лет назад +2

      Blast Processing was never mentioned in Europe, it was an American gimmick

    • @AlexOjideagu2
      @AlexOjideagu2 8 лет назад +1

      Yeh I know, just saying that joke only really applies to North Americans. I know you're joking.

    • @vadouuu4831
      @vadouuu4831 8 лет назад

      ojideagu

  • @retrosimon9843
    @retrosimon9843 7 лет назад +17

    They had faster games. We had RGB Scart.

  • @SianaGearz
    @SianaGearz 8 лет назад +18

    Classic game consoles don't do even/odd line fields, they output 50/60 frames of progressive signal at half the vertical resolution.
    The television broadcasts all have an odd number of lines in total, so that when a new field starts at the beginning of the line, it's an odd field, and when it starts at the middle of the line, it's an even field. Because of this, the synchronization hardware can be designed to handle the odd/even field transition with minimum number of parts - the timing of signals vs. oscillators would implicitly result in the vertical offset between lines of odd and even fields.
    However, classic consoles don't exactly conform to broadcast standards. They have an even total number of lines, thus always triggering the odd field in analog CRT based TV sets. Though it can still land in odd/even fields in digital capture equipment that buffers.

    • @noop9k
      @noop9k 8 лет назад +1

      Siana Gearz wow, someone who is actually competent about TV standards does retrogaming :)

    • @noop9k
      @noop9k 8 лет назад +1

      Siana Gearz yep, that is why there are scanlines and why old games look like crap on modern TVs that try to deinterlace everything.

    • @metroidgus
      @metroidgus 8 лет назад

      this should be top comment since he got this whole explanation wrong

    • @crimtsun
      @crimtsun 7 лет назад

      Cool story bro

    • @noop9k
      @noop9k 7 лет назад

      ***** I think you are projecting too much.

  • @billybobscat6233
    @billybobscat6233 5 лет назад +1

    You know what, I love the way you actually get into history about things beyond the games themselves. I actually learn the reasons behind why they are the way they are instead of just debating the topic at hand like a million other channels do on RUclips. :) You've got a new subscriber.

  • @Monody512
    @Monody512 7 лет назад +5

    The PAL speed is actually tolerable to me.
    Original speed is just a manic clusterf***.

  • @noop9k
    @noop9k 8 лет назад +21

    I think you should have clarified that these old games consoles don't output interlaced images. Every subfield represents a complete frame, output at 50/60 hz. Instead of 480i its 240p for NTSC.

    • @deanfox3067
      @deanfox3067 4 года назад +2

      noop9k how can it output at 240p when the screen does indeed have 480 lines on it (without interlacing)?

    • @noop9k
      @noop9k 4 года назад

      Dean Fox why should I explain widely known facts to you in YT comments?

    • @deanfox3067
      @deanfox3067 4 года назад +1

      noop9k you don’t have to do anything bud. I’ll just assume your comment is incorrect. Thanks.

    • @noop9k
      @noop9k 4 года назад

      Dean Fox Ok. Tell me, what display standard you are talking about that has 480 lines without interlacing.

    • @deanfox3067
      @deanfox3067 4 года назад +1

      noop9k there are none, that’s my point. 240p is not 480i:

  • @cazzin_
    @cazzin_ 7 лет назад +1

    Fantastic outro there, man. Living up to the 'Nostalgia' fo sho x Right awn right awn

  • @googleboughtmee
    @googleboughtmee 8 лет назад +8

    Another good example was Street Fighter II on the SNES. Since we were all used to how the arcade machine played, it was VERY noticable when our SNES version had floaty moon-gravity jumping, and so we started importing NTSC consoles instead.
    But I hate when people suggest they didn't bother to "optimize" the games for PAL - as if it's just a case of being lazy. To speed up the game you need to skip frames which is even worse than running the game slower, things like combos in Street Fighter depend on exact numbers of frames, you'd be changing the entire gameplay.

    • @MrVidification
      @MrVidification 8 лет назад +1

      Games such as Street Fighter II were not using the SNES hardware to it's fullest though, because there were cheats for the datel action replay or game genie that could make the gameplay much faster without skipping any animation at all. You don't need to skip frames to speed something up unless the technology cannot handle the game showing every frame at a faster rate. I'm sure some games couldn't be sped up well though (something like virtua racing on megadrive that had a 3d processor inside the cartridge)

    • @googleboughtmee
      @googleboughtmee 8 лет назад

      +MrVidification I think you've misunderstood the video. This isn't about how fast the hardware can process frames. The vertical refresh rate is locked at 50Hz or 60Hz so of course you cannot just show the same number of frames but somehow faster, you actually have to skip some.

    • @MrVidification
      @MrVidification 8 лет назад

      googleboughtmee
      yes I am only replying to your comment on people saying they developers were 'not bothering to optimise for pal'. You are relating to refresh rate, but the gamers were not. Some people used that as a way to say developers were simply not bothering to spend any extra time to get a game to match it's ntsc equivalent.
      Relating to the last five+ years or so, for the few games that still have no 60hz option as that easy solution, they have now 'optimised' by removing borders,speeding up the game animation etc-with no skipping necessary.

    • @googleboughtmee
      @googleboughtmee 8 лет назад

      MrVidification How do you speed up the game while at the same time keeping it at 50Hz?

    • @MrVidification
      @MrVidification 8 лет назад

      googleboughtmee
      Not every game on the MD system was 17% slower than the ntsc version (50/60hz) but most games at this time were bordered. Of course you could cheat by modding your console with a 60hz switch. Some forums have mentioned bootleg 50hz carts being sped up with added inside components too. I don't know if any official 16 bit carts were 60hz only (I doubt it) but the former could run on any pal tv at 60hz via scart cable.
      I suppose to optimise it's all about noting the maximum fps possible without animation skip, synchronising for both audio and that tv display to avoid output issues. I am sure many older games did not need that screen to redraw at the maximum that their pal and ntsc televisions allowed. Every game was no doubt different in what was possible, so I am sure some games could not be optimised well.
      It's going to be far more time-consuming to do it for complex 3D games, so the 60hz option will usually be there instead.
      The Dreamcast set the standard for 60hz but the PS2 that came after it did not, with a far lower percentage of 60hz titles.
      I think some games such as Crash Bandicoot on PS were optimised,but there were more examples on N64.Someone mentions the SNES pal super tennis being optimised but I can't see a comparison on here

  • @caxm666
    @caxm666 3 года назад +1

    i love this video. best "its not a simple answer" example, ever.

  • @squidcat1489
    @squidcat1489 7 лет назад +4

    Oh man, I had heard about this but never actually saw/heard the direct comparison. It hurts! I've been a fan of Sonic since his existence and holy crap... it's so slow and messed up! It makes my brain confused.
    Thanks for explaining about the difference between NTSC and PAL, I never really knew what was going on with that.

  • @Rationalific
    @Rationalific 8 лет назад +1

    I knew the basics already regarding the difference, but this was still very informative. A fantastic video!

  • @TaylorBroussardShow
    @TaylorBroussardShow 8 лет назад +124

    the side by side made me cringe. holy eu had it bad for sonic games back in the day haha.

    • @Chillywilly8818
      @Chillywilly8818 8 лет назад +2

      same here in Australia

    • @EuroMIX2
      @EuroMIX2 8 лет назад +29

      There was no internet or easy way to compare, so this *was* what Sonic should run like from our perspective. There was no way to feel "screwed over" because it felt like the game ought to be this way. I think some of the songs sound better, honestly; notably Star Light and Final.

    • @edbadyt
      @edbadyt 7 лет назад +13

      Taylor Broussard I still loved it, we didn't know we were being screwed. They fixed the problem by the time of Sonic 2 (by fixed the problem I mean stopped being fucking lazy and remembered most people don't live in America) which was the better game so it was all good.

    • @sliwka621
      @sliwka621 7 лет назад +3

      One Sonic game*

    • @hellwalker899
      @hellwalker899 6 лет назад +2

      You know back in the day when i was kid i didn't give a fuck

  • @dazzla84_ssfc
    @dazzla84_ssfc 8 лет назад +8

    I personally prefer the PAL format when comparing the two, mainly due to the fact it was I grew up with, sure we got slightly slower gameplay but IMO we got superior music, I dont know why but I just feel the music sounded a lot better and more right when played in the slower PAL clock speed

    • @WTFBOOMDOOM
      @WTFBOOMDOOM 4 года назад +2

      When I started to use the internet regularly nearly 15 years ago, one of the things I looked up first was the NES games I had grown up with. I was wondering why they were running so fast for others, especially the music. I then read the explanation and realized that the NES clones I was playing on were running the games too slowly. But to this day I think that NTSC music sounds wrong. Just too fast. Some of the fidelity is lost. One of the best examples is Batman, the 1989 Sunsoft game. I grew up listening to these songs in their slower variant, where they sound much more epic. Though when I play games on an emulator and set it to 50 Hz, it sounds slower than I remember. So maybe these clones used something in-between 50 and 60 Hz?

  • @GameJon
    @GameJon 8 лет назад +4

    PAL was 576 lines of resolution compared to NTSC's 480 lines... Most older consoles (including the Mega Drive) then used a progressive mode (to avoid interlacing) which led to 240p (and scanlines). The additional lines you referenced were just used for overscan and were never visible. This is what essentially led to the 640x480 resolution (progressive) mode that some later consoles adopted over component cables.
    PAL optimisation wasn't really standard until the Dreamcast (which allowed most games to select between 50/60hz)

  • @BlazeFireXERO
    @BlazeFireXERO 8 лет назад

    I absolutely love educational channels like this!
    Almost instantly subscribed, You NEED more views. There's no way ONLY 20K people take interest in this!

  • @kosmosyche
    @kosmosyche 8 лет назад +45

    Also movies in PAL television standard are usually played 1 frame per second faster than they should (at 25 fps as opposed to standard film 24 fps). In NTSC the original movie speed is preserved through complicated "3:2 pull-down" transfer from film 24 fps to NTSC 60 Hz.

    • @paul1979uk2000
      @paul1979uk2000 8 лет назад +1

      I actually thought PAL was 25fps whereas NTSC was 30fps and cinemas used 24fps, could be wrong or misunderstanding it but we see that on RUclips, on TV and DVDs.

    • @kosmosyche
      @kosmosyche 8 лет назад +1

      Yeah, you are absolutely right, but in analog television (PAL or NTSC) these frames are interlaced, which means that one full frame actually consists of 2 fields, hence we have 60 fields per second or 60Hz refresh rate in NTSC television standard and 50 fields per second or 50Hz refresh rate in PAL standard.

    • @paul1979uk2000
      @paul1979uk2000 8 лет назад +1

      kosmosyche I see, that clears that up, I used to sometimes do 50hz on games on the PC years back because for the most part it feels like running at 60hz but it's like having extra performance for nothing,

    • @GraveUypo
      @GraveUypo 8 лет назад +1

      you're crazy. 60hz is already terrible enough. 50 is godawful.

    • @paul1979uk2000
      @paul1979uk2000 8 лет назад +5

      ***** 50hz and 60hz is possible for gamers, 30hz is a bit of a joke, anyway, I used to use 50hz on some PC games in the past when I couldn't quite managed 60fps in games but was averaging in the 50, locking the refresh rate at 50hz pretty much gives the same smoothness of 60hz, even better if your hardware can't quite handle 60fps but it can handle 50fps, you get rid of the judder.

  • @AeroplaneDope
    @AeroplaneDope 27 дней назад

    I’m so glad my Dad was an electrical engineer and aware of this when I was a kid. He was always saying use an RGB Scart and set the Sony Trinitron TV input we had to NTSC 60hz for the Scart input. I do remember wondering why Megadrive games looked and sounded different on other people’s TVs. I also remember that until we got the Scart lead, it was slower but that was only a few weeks.

    • @AeroplaneDope
      @AeroplaneDope 27 дней назад

      I think he also modded the console without letting me know (he didn’t want me opening stuff up and breaking it).

  • @rodmunch69
    @rodmunch69 6 лет назад +2

    Good breakdown, I knew why this was but didn't know the details. Thanks.

  • @FiXato
    @FiXato 8 лет назад +9

    Starting at 13:18, your subtitles no longer constantly match your audio. It's as if content was scratched out from the video during editing, while sub were left in, based on your original script. e.g. "I love it when a plan comes together."

    • @Stettafire
      @Stettafire 4 года назад +1

      It's really distracting. Makes it hard to hear him!

  • @deanfox3067
    @deanfox3067 4 года назад +2

    @nostalgia nerd - The word “Genesis’s” is correct, as it’s a possessive use, not plural.
    Plural would require a common noun to be stuck on the end. As Genesis is a proper noun (being a name). So plural would be Genesis Devices, or Genesis Consoles. However, as you were using possessive grammar, this doesn’t apply.

    • @MrDannyDetail
      @MrDannyDetail 4 года назад

      Proper nouns can and do have plurals though. My name is Daniel. I could conceivably get invited to a party (pandemic restrictions aside) and then on arriving discover that everyone else invited is also called Daniel, which would be a weird way to pick a party guest list, but anyways by your logic we could only refer to it as a room full of 'Daniel people' or 'Daniel men' or something like that, when actually it is perfectly ok to just say a room full of Daniels. I'll grant that the fact that Genesis ends in an 's' makes things trickier, but if my parent's had put my given names in the other order then I would be a James, and if I had therefore been invited to the James party instead of the Daniel party then I would instead be in a room full of Jameses, or possibly that would be written/typed James's or James' ? But we'd none the less all pronounce it the same, however we rendered it in writing or type. That is we'd pronounce it as 'James is'. So with Genesis the plural is presumably written/typed as either Genesises, Genesis's or Genesis' , but here we also have two posible pronunciations, 'genesis is' in line with the way we pluralised James in speech, or 'jenner seize' in the same way that crisis (pronounced 'cry sis') gets pluralised as crises (pronounced 'cry seize')

    • @deanfox3067
      @deanfox3067 4 года назад

      ​@@MrDannyDetail No plural was was intended by the OP. So his grammar, as I reassured him, is correct. The information you provided, I already know and is not relevant in reassuring the OP.

  • @LostFunocity
    @LostFunocity 8 лет назад +1

    That's crazy! I'm gonna have to try this with the gamecube and F-zero GX. I've learned something uslessly useful. Thank you.

  • @ilexgarodan
    @ilexgarodan 8 лет назад +21

    I remember, back as a child, when a friend from the UK came to Canada for the summer, he was blown away with how fast Sonic was over here. I had no idea what he meant when he said "Sonic runs slower on the Mega Drive," until many, many years later.
    Ultimately, during the '80s and '90s, it would have been much easier to just add in coding for optimisation during the European localisation process of a given game. This was rarely done, though. From laziness? Or simply due to the differences in the hardware, given on which side of the pond you're on?

    • @jesuszamora6949
      @jesuszamora6949 4 года назад +4

      Mostly laziness. Nintendo seemed much better about this. From what I've heard, playing PAL Mario 64 on an NTSC system is quite the sped-up experience.

    • @ultrairrelevantnobody1862
      @ultrairrelevantnobody1862 3 года назад +4

      Nintendo seemed like the only company who went the extra mile and optimised most of their games for PAL territories. There were exceptions such as the Mattel version of Mario 1, and Kid Icarus, but overall most games had their music optimised. Zelda 1 & 2, Mario 2 & 3, Kirby's Adventure, etc.

  • @ZakaTech
    @ZakaTech 7 лет назад

    And in Brazil, the PAL-M standard lets you play brazilian Mega Drive at 60Hz and with advantages of image quality of Europe PAL system. ;)
    Excellent video! +1 subscriber!

  • @Storm_.
    @Storm_. 8 лет назад +20

    I've always seen these comparisons with Sonic 1. But what about Sonic 3? Did they fix this in the end because I feel that the JP and EU versions feel the same in that release.

    • @Sotirisdim8
      @Sotirisdim8 8 лет назад +16

      Everything after Sonic 2 was coded to run perfect in both PAL and NTSC

    • @Nostalgianerd
      @Nostalgianerd  8 лет назад +19

      Yeah, they had their act together by the third game.

    • @googleboughtmee
      @googleboughtmee 8 лет назад +3

      +Nostalgia Nerd +Sotirisdim8 Sonic 2 and 3 are both slower on PAL. Check it yourself.

    • @Sotirisdim8
      @Sotirisdim8 8 лет назад +3

      Its definitely not

    • @googleboughtmee
      @googleboughtmee 8 лет назад +2

      Sotirisdim8 How are you testing it? I tested both on Fusion and on the real hardware before posting this.

  • @MsMadLemon
    @MsMadLemon 8 лет назад +1

    Nice! I always find this kind of info about different regions fascinating.

  • @totih144
    @totih144 8 лет назад +4

    As an european fan of the Sega Megadrive and sonic I kinda loved this video! Great channel man, keep going !

  • @paul1979uk2000
    @paul1979uk2000 8 лет назад +1

    When I was a kid I was an Amiga gamer and I remember that you could switch from PAL to NTSC for games and being that most games were designed for PAL on the Amiga, NTSC felt weird and too fast, more so the music, I also played on the SNES and Mega Drive and in all honesty, most of us didn't know about the speed differences from PAL to NTSC and in all honesty it didn't actually matter, it felt nature to us, as the clip points out, there was benefits and negatives to both PAL and NTSC at the time, lucky for us all, we don't have to worry about that anymore.

  • @junelangley2800
    @junelangley2800 7 лет назад +9

    I personally like the PAL music a lot too, I think they are about as good as each other, just quite different. And even though the speed was slower in the PAL region, it was still a fast paced game compared to other games.

  • @ShinyElGhosteo
    @ShinyElGhosteo 7 лет назад +1

    I'm in the US and grew up with the Genesis. Never knew sonic was slower in the pal regions.

  • @Koppens7
    @Koppens7 8 лет назад +41

    Yeah we may of been having our blue hedgehog at a glacier 50hz but we got a lovely somber version of Star Light Zone! Take that rest of the world!

    • @Nostalgianerd
      @Nostalgianerd  8 лет назад +13

      I do enjoy that version. I also prefer Labyrinth Zone in 50hz

    • @Tremadog102
      @Tremadog102 8 лет назад +6

      Similarly, I thought the boss theme sounded more menacing when slowed down.

    • @therealhardrock
      @therealhardrock 8 лет назад +3

      But you do realize that the composer of music always intended it to be in a certain pitch and tempo. That's the big problem with PAL in general is that it has a telecine process that speeds up 24 FPS of film to 25 FPS which speeds up and pitches up the sound unlike the NTSC 3:2 pulldown. Pitching up the sound is far more noticeable than the NTSC "jittering" of 3:2 pulldown.

    • @angelsmith1761
      @angelsmith1761 7 лет назад

      Apart from the film speed up, 50hz does also use a pulldown system done every 12 field of video!
      that works better than the 3:2 pulldown..living in the States back in the 90`s i notice that watching movies on 60hz,the judder was very annoying and distracting to me,i was not accustomed to it, ,also the picture was a little less sharper and the lines very visible on a tv tube 21 inches up and the colour was not as good ,in some programs it look really nice but when they would cross over to programs comming from different parts of the country or video recordings the colours were horrible.
      this you could correct with the tint control that was new to me ,but there came a time you just would not bother to correct it anymore and put up with its colours,now moderm tv sets everywere have these tint controls in them, that i find good only for old american tv shows recorded on old vcr.We did get screw up with the Japs slowing down the games and putting black bars at the top and bottom of the picture due to there lower resolution of video.

  • @johnluckhurst3946
    @johnluckhurst3946 8 лет назад

    I had no idea the speeds were different until now! Really well made video, and I've genuinely learnt something new!

  • @leberkassemmel
    @leberkassemmel 8 лет назад +8

    PAL is still better. I wouldn't have survived without SCART Cables. The Image looks so much better.

    • @ActionGamerAaron
      @ActionGamerAaron 8 лет назад +11

      I'm so jealous of the crisp slowdown and messed up music.

    • @leberkassemmel
      @leberkassemmel 8 лет назад +2

      A Gamer Aaron Why not play games that are made for PAL? Most games have a PAL Version.
      But with Emulation this war has ended.
      I still have a SCART cable, even though only my old CRT has a input for that. So much better than Composite Video.

    • @googleboughtmee
      @googleboughtmee 8 лет назад +5

      NTSC consoles have scart rgb output too

    • @leberkassemmel
      @leberkassemmel 8 лет назад +1

      googleboughtmee I did not know this. I thought SCART was a European thing.

    • @googleboughtmee
      @googleboughtmee 8 лет назад +1

      Michi Lo
      The Americans didn't have the connector on their TVs but I think Japan did, and all regions SNES/MD can definitely output it if you have a TV or monitor to use it.

  • @classicallibral5903
    @classicallibral5903 3 года назад +2

    Only played the PAL version never knew this :D

  • @Grim0514
    @Grim0514 8 лет назад +12

    the green hills zone song slowed down is ew but fast is awsome

    • @snetmotnosrorb3946
      @snetmotnosrorb3946 5 лет назад +1

      You should try some other songs in PAL speed, most are actually better. Particularly Labyrinth and bosses imo. ruclips.net/video/D_ZOZlxFTmU/видео.html I also like Marble and Spring Yard. Green hill zone is probably the worst slowed down.

  • @sosaria7724
    @sosaria7724 8 лет назад

    Interesting video, I've wondered about this since back in the 80's but never took the time to learn about it. Job well done!!

  • @robertmartin1116
    @robertmartin1116 8 лет назад

    Great video! Thank you for the in-depth look at the two different standards. Subscribed.

  • @idimidodjimi6760
    @idimidodjimi6760 8 лет назад +3

    Well that's the reason i never quite licked Sonic, it was way to sluggish , and it was supposed to be fast.
    I kept thinking it was to slow and unresponsive, never quite figured it out until about 10 years later with emulators

    • @LifeOnEarth
      @LifeOnEarth 8 лет назад +7

      Fast things just taste better and require licking.

    • @MrBioniclefan1
      @MrBioniclefan1 5 лет назад

      LifeOnEarth lol

  • @robintst
    @robintst 6 лет назад +1

    Good to know there are PAL optimized games on the Master System. I live in the US and it's a region-free machine, I was tempted to import some UK-only games for it so I'd be interested to see which ones would run too fast to be playable on my NTSC console.

  • @nykraftlemagnifique
    @nykraftlemagnifique 6 лет назад +1

    Hello from France ! Love your videos and this it for the comparaison between 50hz vs 60hz is very good ! I knew the MD when it was launch in France but at this time, no one here knew about the difference of 60Hz because we never heard of it at this time but in the middle of 90's it was a important point for the more hardcore of us and all the Mega Fan want to made the "switch modding" to push the MD in 60Hz ! When I REdiscover my MD in 60Hz is was ... BLASTING PROCESSING FOR REAL IN MY HEAD !!!!!! Wouaaaaa !!!! It's really so far better to play on 60hz than 50hz ! More speed, more reactive, Sonic 2 for example are so great ! I got a lot of memories of this period ! My brother buy in 1993 the Snes (in France it was the Snin !) to play on 60Hz ! When we discover the 60Hz, we never want to replay ours games on 50Hz ! But today in retrogaming there are a lot of people who never heard about this difference and just don't care because they never play games in 60Hz ... it's sad but true !!!! But I know there are some cartridges who was optimised in 50Hz to have the speed of the 60Hz version ! Developpers just made the game runs faster in 50Hz to achieve the 60hz speed like Super Aleste for Snin for example or ThunderForce IV on MD (and for TF4, it's one of the rarest example of I prefer to play the 50Hz version than the 60Hz because it is less slow ... but I put an overclock to my MD - 10,20Mhz CPU Clockspeed like the arcade counterpart of the MD - to help it to have a more consistant and fluid animation and Empire Steel, one of the slowlest shmup I know on MD !).
    I love your works, I love how your video are mounted, documented and commented, I feel your enthousiasm and passion and that's is really why I love to see you. Sorry for my very bad english, I try to made some effort but it's difficult to speak/write english well and correctly ! Hope you the best.

  • @sullyrox
    @sullyrox 7 лет назад +18

    America: GOTTA GO FAST
    Europe / Other PAL Countries: goootttaaa goooo sloooooow

    • @cubecast1
      @cubecast1 7 лет назад +16

      gotta go at a tolerable speed

    • @theobserver4214
      @theobserver4214 6 лет назад +5

      sullyrox America:GOTTA GO FAST
      PAL50 countries:Gotta go at a moderately fast rate

  • @WeeeWeeeification
    @WeeeWeeeification 8 лет назад +1

    Wait... no scart cables? Those were awsome :D I had loads of adaptors that went from basically all kinds of video outputs available. I even had a box so I could plug in 3 things and have it all output on the same tv with a press of either A B or C on the side. Scart cables were so cool and everything in my house was connected to screens with them. My ps1, my ps2 and even when I got my wii I took those 3 bastards of an output and plugged them into an adapter meaning I didn't need to worry about red being with red, yellow being with yellow and white being with white. It was all rolled into one :P

  • @merlingt1
    @merlingt1 8 лет назад

    Wow thanks for the video comparison, I knew about NTSC/PAL but didn't realize that Sonic actually played slower on PAL. I grew up playing Sonic on NTSC, and that 50Hz is just painful to listen to.

  • @kompadre3
    @kompadre3 8 лет назад +7

    Kinda ironic that even older Sonic games have bad programming in them. Linking fps to game speed is a no-no (unless you are writing space invaders for 1978 hardware)!

  • @SinisterSally
    @SinisterSally 8 лет назад +1

    well you got us back with the unplayable "Shadow of the Beast" port.

  • @junglejamesie
    @junglejamesie 5 лет назад +2

    I had a Japanese PAL Megadrive, and got a switch added to the rear to switch between 50Hz and 60Hz.

  • @redhotsonic
    @redhotsonic 8 лет назад +16

    2 things. 1) Sonic 2 in PAL does NOT have optimised gameplay, (it's the exact same as Sonic 1). Only the music is optimised. 2) If you switch the region of the Megadrive/Genesis/emulator during the game being run, you'll get undesired effects. Change the region before starting the game. Otherwise, nice technical video. My video didn't inspire you by any chance did it? :)

    • @theobserver4214
      @theobserver4214 6 лет назад +3

      redhotsonic Sonic 3 I believe was better optimized, as the gameplay was much closer to NTSC speeds

    • @drobnoxius9483
      @drobnoxius9483 5 лет назад

      Hey man like your vids

    • @Seethenhagen
      @Seethenhagen 5 лет назад

      Wouldn't the PAL version modified to run at the right speed on PAL consoles require the PAL ROM?

  • @SirSethery
    @SirSethery 8 лет назад +1

    50Hz regions have always seemed to get the short end of the stick despite technically superior standards.
    Some games were too slow; movies were too fast (though they didn't get the 3:2 pulldown judder)

  • @Krytern
    @Krytern 8 лет назад +3

    When I played Sonic as a kid I always thought the music sounded like it was slowed down. This explains it!

  • @WAQWBrentwood
    @WAQWBrentwood 7 лет назад +1

    Awsome that you showed the original East Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania plant of the Westinghouse Electric & Mfg Co! 1/2 of my family worked in that very complex from about 1905-1980! (many of the buildings are still there.) You might like to know that America's first licenced commercial radio station, KDKA originated on the roof of a building at the East Pittsburgh works!😀👍 Cheers!🍻

  • @justanotheryoutubechannel
    @justanotheryoutubechannel 5 лет назад +5

    I have an original PAL Mega Drive and Sonic 1 cart, and playing it on an old PAL CRT, it’s really not that bad. I actually like it, I might even prefer it slowed down.

  • @waycoolscootaloo
    @waycoolscootaloo 8 лет назад +1

    Today it's the same thing here in the US. All TV's are 60Hz and 60 fps. However with modern flat screens they have a thing called refresh rates. refresh rates are a simulation of the real thing. Your TV is still just 60Hz. But a built in microprocessor in the TV takes the original 60fps and then adds in double the frames for 120Hz. And then again it doubles it if you have a 240Hz TV. A 240Hz TV is still only natively 60Hz. But through manipulation it's possible to simulate more than 60fps.
    So a chip inside a US based TV only has to double each time. (Easy math) 60, 120, 240 etc....
    Every TV manufacturer gives this effect it's own unique name. Samsung calls it Motion rate. And you still see the effects of the 50Hz vs 60Hz. On a US version of a Samsung TV, or LG TV for example, you will see TV's with 60, 120, and 240 motion rates. But in the UK, TV's go 50, 100 and 200 motion rates. That's because the chip inside can only simulate by doubling the native frame rate. The native frame rate on a US TV is still faster due to our 60Hz electrical grid.
    A refresh rate is how fast your screen refreshes. A frame rate is the speed at which the video source was captured at. US TV's max out at displaying 60 fps. But with refresh rates it's possible to make the image on screen far more fluid to the eyes by adding more frames.

    • @dergrammarfuhrer1901
      @dergrammarfuhrer1901 7 лет назад

      You're talking about frame interpolation, even CRT TVs had a refresh rate, my old gaming monitor was a 75Hz CRT.
      "A refresh rate is how fast your screen refreshes. A frame rate is the speed at which the video source was captured at" Yes, this, exactly this, it has nothing to do with doubling the frames, like I said, that's frame interpolation.

    • @krashd
      @krashd 6 лет назад

      I'm fairly sure 60Hz is global standard now, I've never seen a 50,100 or 200 TV, only 60, 120 and 240.

  • @125darkangel
    @125darkangel 8 лет назад +5

    Tbh the 50Hz intro made me uncomfortable

  • @TheZmusicGroup
    @TheZmusicGroup 5 лет назад +2

    I don't understand what was Sega thinking... Even most third party games were optimized for the PAL format by 1991! I remember the game Hellfire, from Toaplan, a 1989 Megadrive game running absolutely fine in PAL!
    But for freakin SONIC, you know, Sega's mascott, a game designed to boost sales and to show the Megadrive capabilities, they didn't even bother to optimize it for PAL regions... A shame, really.
    At least Nintendo optimized their IP for PAL on NES, SMB1 runs even faster in PAL than the NTSC version!

  • @cedwardsmedia
    @cedwardsmedia 4 года назад +2

    See that? In America, even our electronics are always in a hurry 🤣

  • @guksack
    @guksack 7 лет назад +1

    PAL-speed Star Light Zone music is still the one though.

  • @elimalinsky7069
    @elimalinsky7069 6 лет назад +2

    Games released on the Mega Drive specifically for Europe usually utililze the higher resolution and better colour reproduction of PAL. So basically you give up some framerates for some higher resolution and better colours. Most games on the Mega Drive rarely hit 50fps anyway, so the framerate issue isn't that of an issue for most games released on the system.

  • @AmstradExin
    @AmstradExin 8 лет назад +4

    Ehm, alternating current was _not_ invented for higher efficiency for long distances, but simply to make a more simplified motor work. For long distance transmission, the Voltge is at 50,000-150,000 Volts, THAT makes it efficient. Because the lines can be loaded with minimal current-intensity (Ampere) which is important because the higher the Intensity (Ampere), the hotter the wire gets. The colder the cable is, the more efficient is current distribution. But the total electrical power is what's important at the end. For example, 100kW (Kilowatts) divided by 220V would be a whopping 455 Ampere! That is enough to make a nail melt in 3 seconds! (Look for 500 Ampere on youtube). At 100kV it would be measily 1A. A good household cable is rated at 16A.... At 50hz the length of the sinus-wave is 6000kM....not so important. Frequency is important for transforming low to high voltage. (In transformers for older LCD backlights)

    • @WAQWBrentwood
      @WAQWBrentwood 7 лет назад +3

      AmstradExin Um, Ok, Ahhhh, WTF, Without alternating current, How would you convert the low amperage,but high voltage current to the high amperage,low voltage current needed at the user end? Alternating Current certainly was developed PRIMARILY for long distance transmission of power It took a fuckin genuine genius (Nikola Tesla) to invent a practical AC motor when DC motors were already common at the time, That in and of itself proves that AC certainly was NOT developed to make simpler motors (I now officially have a headache...)

    • @krashd
      @krashd 6 лет назад +1

      No, AC was chosen because you can send it cheaply over a distance by having multiple phases close together on a single pole, to send HVDC over a long distance is enormously dangerous and inefficient and can really only be done underground and is why Edison proposed having small power stations scattered throughout cities. Even today we only send HVDC under rivers and seas because the consequences of an accident could be catastrophic.
      Research it.

  • @SumeaBizarro
    @SumeaBizarro 8 лет назад

    Only tidbit I expected this video mention, especially in the "engine modification" part was the fact that Sonic 2 and Sonic 3 (and knuckles) do have a detection for 50hz. They ONLY change the music speed to what it should be, rest of the engine, gameplay, and even some sound effects and jingles are all still that 1/6th slower in 50hz mode. Someone with a switch can cause some havok by booting the game in 50hz and then flicking it to 60hz mode on the fly. Crashing is very likely to occur too though.

  • @Sonicshadow191
    @Sonicshadow191 8 лет назад

    Well this makes things a lot clearer. From the UK and I always thought Sonic was easier on the Mega Drive and I'd just lost my touch on the newer emulated versions. It also explains why the music sounds different on YT

  • @wakcedout
    @wakcedout 8 лет назад

    I got to enjoy the fast sonic as a kid living in the states but about a year ago I found a video where someone back in the 90's overclocked it and made sonic run even smoother on ntsc hardware. Showing that when multiple sprites were on screen the hardware couldn't handle it this causing the slow down you get when losing rings. Much like space invaders when you destroy more aliens.

  • @Requiem100500
    @Requiem100500 7 лет назад +5

    Gotta go at a moderate speed

  • @InsanePsychoRabbit
    @InsanePsychoRabbit 3 года назад +1

    Sonic is actually moving at his intended speed in America. The correct question should be "Why is Sonic slower in Europe?" (Disclaimer: am American)

  • @bunglebro
    @bunglebro 8 лет назад +16

    I honestly prefer playing sonic at 50hz! I'm not sure if its nostalgia, but I dont seem to die as much haha

    • @linkno1
      @linkno1 8 лет назад +22

      That's because it's essentially an easier game since with in literally running slower, you have more time to react to stuff.

  • @cookingwithdavid5169
    @cookingwithdavid5169 7 лет назад

    Nostalgia Nerd: I love your videos. My name is Dave and I'm from Scotland now living in America so I really like this video. In this particular video however I just wanted to nitpick that you say "over here" meaning UK and then later you again say over here although this time meaning USA. It's a pathetic nitpick but I thought you'd appreciate that it makes it more difficult to "know" where you are. Love and hugs, fellow gamer! I love your work please keep going.
    I always did and still do care about input lag and fps. It's been an obsession since 486 and later SNES.
    I really loved your edo memory video. You really hit home with that. Thank you for being you and keeping focused on keeping your channel going! many likes many smiles many jokings many laughings!

  • @THESHMUPMASTER
    @THESHMUPMASTER 8 лет назад +12

    Wow... The segment where you compared the speeds for Sonic 1 is almost identical to one I did back in July on my channel... Interesting :P

    • @Nostalgianerd
      @Nostalgianerd  8 лет назад +9

      I mean, I'll be honest. I actually saw it done here ruclips.net/video/iPhESbeKFIE/видео.html but he might have borrowed from you as well. It's a good test. Makes complete sense.

  • @Foebane72
    @Foebane72 8 лет назад +1

    The Amiga was able to switch between PAL and NTSC with ease, but unfortunately, games made in NTSC territories run in PAL territories were obvious by the ugly black border in the bottom fifth of the screen. On the other hand, I feel sorry for Americans who missed out on British-made Amiga games and almost every single Demoscene production because they wouldn't be able to see the bottom fifth of the screen in NTSC. And of course, speed was still an issue here too. I'm just glad that the Amiga flourished in PAL territories rather than NTSC territories.

  • @Lady_Moonsong
    @Lady_Moonsong 8 лет назад +21

    There's not a single redeeming feature of PAL50

    • @WeeeWeeeification
      @WeeeWeeeification 8 лет назад +3

      What about the fact that having to output less frames meaning that they could be outputed with slightly higher accuracy(I know it's a shit answer but what did you expect :P)

    • @bangerbangerbro
      @bangerbangerbro 8 лет назад +6

      Actually it has a higher vertical resolution I think.

    • @Lady_Moonsong
      @Lady_Moonsong 8 лет назад

      Yep, came from a castlevania 3 romhack that I made.

    • @SproutyPottedPlant
      @SproutyPottedPlant 8 лет назад +4

      SirBlueWizard PAL 50 doesn't have a ridiculous tint control, RGB SCART too!

    • @KRAFTWERK2K6
      @KRAFTWERK2K6 8 лет назад +11

      @ SirBlueWizard You my friend are wrong. PAL 50 hertz runs stable and does not need any bullshit dropped frames trickery like you would need for NTSC to make the shit work somehow. Besides PAL always had the supperior color presentation, while NTSC was a disaster for broadcasters. NTSC was also known as an acronym for "Never The Same Color" for a reason.

  • @xkcsjhcwswkjdfscfkncencioe2313
    @xkcsjhcwswkjdfscfkncencioe2313 2 года назад

    This has blown my mind. Serious it has. Who would think Sonic the Flipping Hedgehog would be a Science lesson

  • @RaceToNowhere
    @RaceToNowhere 8 лет назад

    What a beautifully competent explaination

  • @segasdreamer
    @segasdreamer 8 лет назад +3

    Reading these comments make me glad I own a Genesis. The Mega Drive is good too, but where's the Genesis Does?

    • @RyanSonic
      @RyanSonic 8 лет назад +5

      Genesis does what Mega Drive... don't. (y cant I think of a rhyme? .__.)

    • @leoleonvids
      @leoleonvids 8 лет назад

      Megadrive is the japanese name for the rieneledne ( no i don't want to say it ) too. And that's NTSC.

    • @mc.gemstone
      @mc.gemstone 8 лет назад +1

      I agree XD poor megadrive

    • @segasdreamer
      @segasdreamer 8 лет назад

      Especially now that there are people who get the Framemeister and use SCART to get the best picture possible while getting the 60 hz.

    • @jonsan5693
      @jonsan5693 8 лет назад +1

      Yes the mega drive is a different console. We all know sega had to make a totally different console for EU it's not like sega changed the name of the mega drive to genesis due to copyright or anything, Stupid wikapedia how dare you lie to us.

  • @KuraIthys
    @KuraIthys 8 лет назад

    Just remember the section talking about how TV's only show half the picture at a time of this video misleadingly implies that game consoles output interlaced video. They don't. They use a hacked timing signal to output 224p or 240p or something like that by drawing the same set of lines twice, and leaving the other lines blank.
    This is what causes the dark lines on a display that emulators call the 'scanline effect'.
    It also causes most modern non-crt TV's to display the output of old consoles and home computers incorrectly, leading to an odd form of image instability that's not supposed to be there.
    (mosern tv's largely ignore the actual timing signal, and just assume a pal input is 576i, and an ntsc one is 480i, which, for most systems up to about the ps1/n64 era is wrong, and displays the picture incorrectly)

  • @RyanMartinez
    @RyanMartinez 8 лет назад +4

    You were robbed in the UK/EU. :/

    • @ChristopherSobieniak
      @ChristopherSobieniak 8 лет назад +3

      And we Americans felt robbed when it came to certain titles either Japan had or Europe got sometimes.

    • @RyanMartinez
      @RyanMartinez 8 лет назад +1

      Christopher Sobieniak Yeah... :/

    • @TheToyBoy1978
      @TheToyBoy1978 8 лет назад +1

      alien soldier being 1 of them ;)

  • @megabojan1993
    @megabojan1993 8 лет назад +1

    I always played Sonic at 70Hz, I just loved the additional speed :)

  • @durkadur27
    @durkadur27 8 лет назад +49

    must suck to be a gamer in eu

    • @BrySkye
      @BrySkye 8 лет назад +6

      Well it certainly *did* though, as the video points out, it's not like we knew any better in the 80's and early 90's.
      It wasn't really until the popularity of pirating on the Playstation via mod-chips that more people became aware of the differences at a far larger scale than those that imported consoles and games.
      After that, more would seek out US copies of pirated games instead of PAL ones.
      What isn't mentioned in the video is that, starting with the Dreamcast, we started getting an actual PAL60 mode, provided it was coded into the game.
      Many Dreamcast, Xbox and Gamecube games would support this PAL60 mode so for the likes of Sonic Adventure, Super Smash Bros Melee, Halo 2, we were on an even playing field before the arrivial of HDTV rendered the whole situation irrelevant.

    • @durkadur27
      @durkadur27 8 лет назад

      BrySkye
      When you speak about Dream cast never forget Powerstone.

    • @leoleonvids
      @leoleonvids 8 лет назад +1

      It does not suck.

    • @abloogywoogywoo
      @abloogywoogywoo 8 лет назад +10

      Back then. Yes. Nowadays not so much.

    • @MrVidification
      @MrVidification 8 лет назад +1

      My first console to offer 60hz was definitely Dreamcast. Some developers probably still remain lazy though, especially on virtual stores. I don't know if there are pal ps1 or ps2 games on the PS4 store, but I'd be wondering if they just run in their original 50hz mode or are all optimised, if any exist. Gamers were modding their MD and SNES around 1994 with 50-60hz switches just so they could play rpgs such as Final Fantasy at full speed and full screen, but nowadays of course far more people demand it.

  • @jamessmith84240
    @jamessmith84240 3 года назад

    Kids these days don't know how lucky they are to have high resolution and framerate displays. Those 1990's TV screens were not only bad at framerate and resolution, they were "blurry" and had lines across the screen if the tv was old. I'll never forget how amazing "Carmageddon" looked being played in 1024 x 762 on my mates Voodoo graphics card equipped PC in 1997. If you compare it to something like "Twisted Metal" from the Playstation in 1996, it was like night and day.

  • @coolbluelights
    @coolbluelights 8 лет назад +4

    Typical British, doing everything wrong :P

    • @Adam-ob3vs
      @Adam-ob3vs 3 года назад

      1. PAL is originally from Germany, not UK
      2. It’s not a PAL’s fault that Sonic was so bad in PAL version.. PAL was maybe even better system than NTSC was, because of higher resolution and better colors.. refresh rate was slightly slower but it was very small difference.. it’s a pity that some game developers didn’t optimise games like this for this better system :P

  • @mark_parsons
    @mark_parsons 8 лет назад

    Interesting video! I remember first coming across the impact of the difference between NTSC and PAL back in the days of the 8-bit Atari (early/mid 1980s) as in the US they'd do something weird with pixel art layout termed 'artifacting' which effectively displayed additional colours that the machine otherwise couldn't. When you played on a PAL machine / display these would come out as strange purple or green, not quite as the developer originally intended!
    The change of speed of game music is the hardest for me to accept - games that I grew up with and loved don't sound right if they're played at 60Hz even though that was in many cases the speed used by the developer.

  • @obiwankenobi1608
    @obiwankenobi1608 4 года назад

    I love how this man put sanic on america and then sonic on europe.

  • @thegamingbros9437
    @thegamingbros9437 8 лет назад

    +Nostalgia Nerd you earned a new subscriber.

  • @PrincessZoey
    @PrincessZoey 8 лет назад +11

    North America* :D

    • @Nostalgianerd
      @Nostalgianerd  8 лет назад +23

      I actually literally mean, most of the Americas. 60Hz spread throughout the North & South continents.

    • @user-cu1uj6bl3r
      @user-cu1uj6bl3r 8 лет назад +7

      what a snooty comment. Ignoring all the work that went into this video to attempt to be a grammar nazi when the terminology was just misinterpreted by yourself.

    • @PrincessZoey
      @PrincessZoey 8 лет назад +1

      Boo Your comment is also ignoring the video great work there buddy

    • @user-cu1uj6bl3r
      @user-cu1uj6bl3r 8 лет назад +7

      Did you just use a "I know you are, but why am I" style comeback?

    • @PrincessZoey
      @PrincessZoey 8 лет назад +1

      Well no I called you a hypocrite but your too daft to understand that

  • @MyEmkill
    @MyEmkill 8 лет назад

    Most interesting video on your channel, GJ

  • @SouthwesternEagle
    @SouthwesternEagle 6 лет назад +2

    The FCC forced RCA to develop a color standard compatible on both color and black & white TVs. A color carrier signal had to be able to display on both color and B&W TVs. That's why NTSC isn't perfect color. RCA developed perfect color in 1954 akin to PAL, but then this B&W backwards compatibility mandate by the FCC (called The Equal Pain Rule) compromised the color's quality.