⬡ Free Online Tool

Sensitivity
Converter

Translate your aim across games — instantly & accurately

Mouse DPI
From Game
IN-GAME SENSITIVITY
To Game
CONVERTED SENSITIVITY
Effective DPI (eDPI)
Your true sensitivity benchmark = DPI × In-game sens. Use this number to compare across setups and games.
cm / 360°
in / 360°
Sens Tier
ADS & Scope Sensitivity
Most games let you set a separate sensitivity multiplier when aiming down sights (ADS). Enter your hipfire sensitivity above first, then use this calculator to find the ideal ADS sensitivity for each zoom level — based on a matched focal length (the gold standard used by pros).
Hipfire Sensitivity
From your main converter above
Target Game
Monitor Distance %
0% = relative · 75% = pro standard · 100% = full match
Supported Games & Multipliers
Game Yaw (deg/count) Typical Range Genre
Sensitivity Tips for Gamers
Start with eDPI
Professional FPS players average between 200–400 eDPI. Higher eDPI means faster flicks; lower eDPI means more precision. Use eDPI to compare setups across games.
The 360° Rule
Most pros use 30–50 cm for a full 360° rotation. Under 25 cm is considered "high sensitivity," over 60 cm is "low sensitivity." Find what works for your arm style.
Muscle Memory Transfer
When switching games, use this converter to match your 360° distance exactly. It takes 1–2 weeks of practice for your aim to fully adapt to a new sensitivity.
DPI vs In-Game
Lower DPI (400–800) with higher in-game sensitivity gives smoother tracking than high DPI with low in-game sens, due to raw hardware polling precision.
How This Tool Works
Every FPS game uses a different internal unit to measure how fast your view rotates when you move the mouse. This tool converts your sensitivity between any two games so that your physical mouse movement always feels identical — same wrist flick, same 180°, same crosshair landing spot.
01
Enter Your Mouse DPI
DPI (Dots Per Inch) is a hardware setting on your mouse. It controls how many pixels the cursor moves per inch of physical movement. Common values are 400, 800, and 1600. You can find your DPI in your mouse software (e.g. Logitech G Hub, Razer Synapse, SteelSeries GG). Select a preset or type your exact DPI in the custom field.
02
Select Your Source Game & Sensitivity
Choose the game you're currently playing from the From Game dropdown, then type your current in-game sensitivity value exactly as it appears in that game's settings menu. For example, if you play Valorant at 0.35 sensitivity, select Valorant and enter 0.35.
03
Choose Your Target Game
Pick the game you want to convert to from the To Game dropdown. The converted sensitivity appears instantly in the right field. Copy it with the ⎘ button and paste it directly into that game's settings. Your aim will feel exactly the same as before.
04
Read Your Stats
Below the converter you'll see three key numbers: cm/360° (how many centimetres you move your mouse to do a full rotation), in/360° (same in inches), and your Sensitivity Tier ranging from Very High to Very Low. These stats are universal — they mean the same thing in every game, making them the best way to describe your sensitivity to other players.
⚙ The Conversion Formula

Each game uses a fixed yaw value — the number of degrees your view rotates per raw mouse count. For example, CS2's yaw is 0.022 and Valorant's is 0.07.

The formula to find an equivalent sensitivity is:

Target Sensitivity = (Source Sensitivity × Source Yaw) ÷ Target Yaw

This ensures the total degrees-per-count is identical in both games, meaning your physical mouse movement produces the exact same view rotation regardless of which game you're in.

Your eDPI (Effective DPI) is calculated as: Mouse DPI × In-game Sensitivity. It's the single most useful number for comparing your sensitivity across different setups and games — many pro players use it as their primary reference.