CS2 DPI Calculator
Use this tool to convert CS2 sensitivity between different DPI settings, calculate eDPI, and estimate your cm/360 (how many centimeters you move your mouse to turn 360° in game).
1) Sensitivity Converter (Keep the Same Feel)
2) eDPI + cm/360 Calculator
Formula uses CS2 yaw value 0.022. Results are estimates for practical setup and consistency checks.
What is a DPI calculator for CS2?
A CS2 DPI calculator helps you keep your aim consistent when you change mouse hardware or sensitivity settings. The biggest use case is simple: you buy a new mouse, switch from 800 DPI to 1600 DPI, and your crosshair suddenly feels too fast. Instead of guessing, you use math to preserve the same mouse feel.
The calculator above handles three key numbers used by serious Counter-Strike players: DPI, sensitivity, and eDPI. It also estimates cm/360, which many players use as a real-world physical benchmark for muscle memory and consistency.
How to use this CS2 sensitivity calculator
Quick conversion steps
- Enter your current DPI and current CS2 sensitivity.
- Enter your new DPI value.
- Click Convert Sensitivity.
- Apply the new sensitivity in CS2 and test in a practice map.
This conversion preserves eDPI, which is the easiest way to maintain roughly the same turning speed and aiming behavior.
Checking your setup with cm/360
- Enter your DPI and sensitivity in the second section.
- Click Calculate Metrics to see eDPI, cm/360, and inches/360.
- If you have a target cm/360, enter it to get the recommended sensitivity.
Core terms every CS2 player should know
DPI (Dots Per Inch)
DPI is your mouse sensor sensitivity at the hardware level. Higher DPI means the cursor moves farther for the same physical mouse movement.
In-game sensitivity
This is CS2’s multiplier applied on top of your DPI. Small changes here can significantly affect tracking, flicks, and micro-adjustments.
eDPI (effective DPI)
eDPI = DPI × sensitivity. This creates a standardized number so two players can compare aim speed even with different DPI and sensitivity combinations.
cm/360
cm/360 tells you how many centimeters your mouse must travel to rotate 360° in game. Lower cm/360 means faster sensitivity; higher cm/360 means slower sensitivity.
Typical sensitivity ranges in CS2
There is no universal “best sensitivity,” but many riflers and AWPers cluster in moderate ranges for control and precision. As a broad reference:
- Lower sensitivity: high precision, larger arm movement, often around 40–60+ cm/360.
- Medium sensitivity: balanced style, often around 30–45 cm/360.
- Higher sensitivity: faster turns and small-pad viability, often below 30 cm/360.
What matters most is consistency: keep one setup long enough to build repeatable mechanics.
Why your aim can still feel “off” after perfect conversion
Even when math is correct, aim may feel different due to non-sensitivity variables. Check the following:
- Mouse shape and weight changed.
- Skates or mousepad friction changed.
- Polling rate is different (e.g., 1000 Hz vs 4000 Hz).
- You changed posture, desk height, or grip style.
- Raw input or acceleration settings are inconsistent in other games/tools.
Do a short adaptation period before making additional sensitivity changes.
Practical workflow to lock in your CS2 settings
1) Set a stable base
Pick a DPI (commonly 400, 800, or 1600), then choose a sensitivity that gives comfortable micro-control and reliable 180° turns.
2) Verify with this calculator
Use eDPI and cm/360 outputs to document your setup. Save your values in a note so future hardware changes are easy to manage.
3) Test in routines
Run aim botz, recoil tracking, pre-aim maps, and deathmatch for 3–7 days before deciding whether to tweak settings.
4) Adjust slowly
If you need change, move in small steps (for example, 3–7% sensitivity change), then retest. Large jumps make consistency harder.
FAQ: DPI calculator CS2
Is higher DPI always better?
No. Higher DPI can reduce visible pixel stepping, but practical performance depends on your total setup, control, and comfort.
Should I copy a pro player’s sensitivity?
You can use pro settings as a starting point, but your desk space, mousepad, grip, and playstyle may require a different value.
What is more important: eDPI or cm/360?
Both are useful. eDPI is fast for conversion, while cm/360 is great for understanding physical mouse movement and muscle memory.
Does CS2 use the same basic yaw math as CS:GO?
For practical sensitivity calculations, most players use the same 0.022 yaw constant. This calculator follows that standard approach.
Final thoughts
A good CS2 DPI setup is less about chasing a magical number and more about repeatability. Use the calculator to convert accurately, keep your environment stable, and give yourself enough time to adapt. Consistency beats constant tweaking.