It does depend on where you purchased your DMP-BD30 from. Most of the players have only been available from the Panasonic web site or Panasonic High Street shops, and their players are only Region 2 for standard DVD, which is just UK/Europe. Some web sites have advertised the DMP-BD30 as multi-region for standard DVD, so it's probably best to check with your supplier if the machine has been modified for multi region playback of standard DVD. Although we could all debate the issue of regional coding until the cows come home, the situation for Blu-rays does appear to be relaxed, if not more complicated than standard DVDs. Approximately half of all US Blu-ray discs are not regionally coded. As a general rule 20th Century Fox and MGM are Region A for US/Canada only. Some Sony Pictures (Columbia) and some Buena Vista (Disney/Touchstone/Hollywood/Pixar/Miramax) titles are reginally coded. Lionsgate and New Line early titles weren't regionally coded, but newer titles are. Warner Brothers have until now been region free, and hopefully will remain so!? Paramount and Universal were quite happy to support HD DVD not regionally coded, so hopefully they will continue that when they publish on Blu-ray. There are a number of sites, blurayregioncodes.com and movietyme.com amongst others who list the region free discs. We have Terminator 2, Total Recall and No Country For Old Men. All three are labelled as Region A, but play fine on both our Panasonic DMP-BD30 and Samsung BD-P1400 Blu-ray players! They are listed as region free on the sites, so 'A' could have been a printing error or a change of mind by the studios?