Mouse Sensitivity Converter
Convert your sensitivity between games using DPI and each game’s yaw constant. This helps keep your muscle memory consistent across FPS titles.
Find Sensitivity From Target cm/360
Already know your preferred turning distance? Enter cm/360 to find the required in-game sensitivity.
Note: Yaw constants are widely used community values and may vary slightly by patch, profile options, ADS multipliers, or special FOV settings.
What is a mouse sensitivity calculator?
A mouse sensitivity calculator helps you convert aiming settings between games so that your mouse movement feels consistent. Different games use different internal scaling values, so copying the same number from one title to another almost never gives the same feel. A calculator solves this by accounting for DPI, in-game sensitivity, and each game’s yaw constant.
Why consistent sensitivity matters
When your sensitivity is consistent, your brain spends less energy adapting and more energy focusing on crosshair placement, recoil control, and decision-making. This is especially useful for players who switch between games like CS2, Valorant, Apex Legends, and Overwatch 2. Maintaining similar turning distance (cm/360) can make transitions smoother and reduce over-aiming or under-aiming.
Core terms you should know
- DPI (Dots Per Inch): The hardware sensitivity setting of your mouse.
- In-game sensitivity: The multiplier the game applies to your mouse input.
- eDPI: DPI × in-game sensitivity. Useful for rough comparisons within the same game ecosystem.
- Yaw: A game-specific constant that determines how much camera rotation you get per unit of mouse input.
- cm/360: How many centimeters you move your mouse for a full 360° turn. One of the best cross-game consistency metrics.
How this calculator works
The converter keeps your physical turn distance constant using this relationship:
Target Sensitivity = (Current DPI × Current Sensitivity × Current Yaw) ÷ (Target DPI × Target Yaw)
From there, it also estimates your cm/360 and in/360 so you can check whether your settings are in your preferred range.
Recommended process for best results
- Start with your main game and sensitivity where your aim feels most natural.
- Convert settings for secondary games using the calculator.
- Play 2–3 sessions before making changes; avoid over-tuning daily.
- Adjust in small steps (2% to 5%) only if needed.
- Keep the same mousepad, posture, and arm position while testing.
What is a good cm/360 for FPS games?
There is no perfect value for everyone, but many tactical FPS players prefer roughly 30–50 cm/360 for precision. Arena and tracking-heavy games often feel better with somewhat faster settings. If you are unsure where to start, choose a middle value like 35 cm/360 and iterate slowly.
General starting ranges
- Tactical FPS (CS2, Valorant): ~30 to 55 cm/360
- Hybrid shooters (Apex, COD): ~25 to 45 cm/360
- Fast arena/hero shooters (Overwatch, Quake): ~20 to 40 cm/360
Common mistakes to avoid
- Changing sensitivity after every bad match.
- Comparing eDPI across games with different yaw systems without conversion.
- Ignoring ADS/scoped multipliers (hip-fire and scoped aim can differ).
- Using very high sensitivity before mastering mouse control fundamentals.
FAQ
Is eDPI enough for cross-game conversion?
No. eDPI is useful within a single game but not enough across different engines. You need yaw-aware conversion or cm/360 matching.
Should I copy pro player sensitivity?
Pro settings can be a useful reference, but your ideal value depends on desk space, grip style, reaction profile, and comfort.
Can I use this for ADS sensitivity too?
This calculator targets base/hip-fire sensitivity. ADS and scoped values often require separate multipliers and game-specific formulas.
Final thoughts
A good mouse sensitivity setup is less about finding one “magic number” and more about achieving consistency. Use this mouse sensitivity calculator to build a reliable baseline, then refine with disciplined practice. Over time, stable settings lead to better aim mechanics and more predictable performance in every game you play.