📅This fact may be outdated
This trick was real and worked on most DVD players from the 2000s-2010s to bypass unskippable previews and FBI warnings. However, DVDs are now largely obsolete technology, replaced by streaming services and digital downloads.
When watching a DVD press stop-stop-play-skip to skip the ads and go straight to the movie.
The DVD Stop-Stop-Play Trick That Saved Movie Night
If you owned DVDs in the 2000s, you knew the pain: pop in a disc for movie night, and suddenly you're held hostage by five minutes of unskippable previews for movies you'll never watch, anti-piracy warnings, and studio logos. The fast-forward button? Disabled. The menu button? Locked out. You could make popcorn, check your phone, or contemplate the heat death of the universe while waiting.
But then someone discovered the cheat code: Stop. Stop. Play.
The Magic Button Sequence
Press the stop button on your DVD remote twice, then hit play. That's it. On most DVD players and discs, this simple sequence would bypass all the forced content and dump you straight into the main menu or the movie itself. It felt like discovering a secret passage in your own living room.
The trick spread through online forums and word-of-mouth like wildfire. Suddenly, everyone was jabbing their remotes with the precision of a Mortal Kombat finishing move. Stop-stop-play became muscle memory for anyone serious about their movie marathons.
Why It Actually Worked
DVDs use something called User Operation Prohibition (UOP), a DRM technology that tells your player which buttons to ignore during certain parts of the disc. When you insert a DVD, it reads a configuration file that essentially says "the user can't skip this FBI warning" or "disable fast-forward during these trailers."
The stop-stop-play trick exploited a quirk in how DVD players handled the stop command. Pressing stop twice typically reset the player's playback state, clearing those restrictions. When you hit play again, the player would jump to the main content, treating it like you'd just opened the disc fresh. Different manufacturers implemented this differently, which is why some players needed three stops, or just one stop, or stop-then-menu. It was DVD player roulette.
When It Didn't Work
The trick wasn't universal. Some DVD publishers got wise and encoded their discs to resist even the stop button during forced content. Disney DVDs, in particular, were notoriously stubborn—their "Fast Play" feature was basically unskippable preview hell. Other workarounds emerged:
- Press stop three times instead of twice
- Hit stop once, then immediately press play
- Use the menu button to jump to scene selection, then pick chapter one
- Simply wait it out while questioning your life choices
The End of an Era
Today, this trick is a time capsule from the physical media era. Streaming killed the DVD, and with it, the need for remote control sorcery just to watch a movie you already paid for. Netflix doesn't make you sit through five trailers before Stranger Things starts playing. Disney+ won't lecture you about piracy on a disc you legally purchased.
But for those who lived through DVD's golden age, stop-stop-play remains a small victory—a reminder that users will always find ways around artificial restrictions, one button press at a time.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does the stop-stop-play DVD trick actually work?
Why can't you skip previews on DVDs?
What is the DVD stop trick button sequence?
Do DVDs still have unskippable ads?
Why did Disney DVDs not let you skip previews?
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