aim lab sensitivity calculator

Aim Lab Sensitivity Converter

Convert your current game sensitivity to an equivalent Aim Lab sensitivity while preserving the same 360° turn distance.

Tip: Make sure your Aim Lab game profile matches the target scale selected above for accurate results.

Why use an Aim Lab sensitivity calculator?

If your sensitivity changes every time you switch games, your muscle memory and mouse control can feel inconsistent. An Aim Lab sensitivity calculator helps you keep the same physical turning distance (usually measured as cm/360), so your training carries over better from one title to another.

Instead of guessing a number and spending hours readjusting, you can convert your known settings quickly and start practicing immediately.

How this conversion works

The calculator uses each game’s yaw value (the amount of camera rotation per mouse input unit). Once we know your source game sensitivity, DPI, and yaw, we can match the same turn distance in Aim Lab.

Core formulas used

  • eDPI = DPI × in-game sensitivity
  • Inches/360 = 360 ÷ (DPI × sensitivity × yaw)
  • cm/360 = Inches/360 × 2.54
  • Target sensitivity = Source sensitivity × (Source yaw ÷ Target yaw)

Step-by-step setup guide

1) Enter your current game and sensitivity

Select the game you currently play most, then enter your exact sensitivity value. Use as many decimal places as your game allows.

2) Add your mouse DPI

Use your real DPI from your mouse software. If you switch DPI profiles, use the one you actually play with.

3) Choose your Aim Lab profile

Aim Lab supports different sensitivity scales through game profiles. Pick the one that matches your Aim Lab setup to avoid mismatches.

4) Apply and verify

After calculating, copy the sensitivity value into Aim Lab. Test a few 180° and 360° turns to confirm it feels consistent with your source game.

Practical tips for better aim transfer

  • Keep the same DPI across all games and trainers.
  • Turn off mouse acceleration in both Windows and game settings when possible.
  • Match your FOV and monitor distance settings if your routine depends on visual consistency.
  • Train with one primary sensitivity for at least 2–4 weeks before making major changes.
  • Track your scores in Aim Lab and compare trends before and after any sensitivity update.

Common mistakes players make

Using the wrong profile in Aim Lab

This is the most common issue. If you calculate for one scale and Aim Lab is set to another, your number will feel off immediately.

Changing too many variables at once

If you modify sensitivity, FOV, resolution, and posture at the same time, it becomes hard to know what helped or hurt performance.

Ignoring grip and pad space

Even with perfect conversion math, your setup must support your play style. Low sens players need enough mousepad room for large swipes.

FAQ

Is eDPI enough for conversion?

Not always. eDPI is useful for rough comparison, but true conversion needs yaw values to preserve the same turn distance accurately.

Should I use cm/360 as my main benchmark?

Yes. cm/360 is one of the most reliable ways to maintain consistency across games and aim trainers.

What if my game is not listed?

Use the Custom Yaw option and enter that game’s yaw value. The calculator will still produce an equivalent Aim Lab sensitivity.

Final thoughts

A good aim training routine starts with stable settings. Use this Aim Lab sensitivity calculator to remove guesswork, preserve your muscle memory, and focus your energy on mechanics that truly matter: crosshair placement, tracking, flick timing, and smooth movement.

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