Sensitivity Conversion
How to Convert Sensitivity Across More FPS Games
Switching between shooters can make the same mouse feel completely different. A sensitivity value that feels slow in one game may feel fast in another because each game can use a different scale for turning your view.
Why More Game Support Helps
Players rarely stay inside one shooter forever. You might play Valorant on ranked nights, Apex with friends, Battlefield for casual sessions, and a new arena shooter when it launches. More supported games means you can start from a familiar baseline instead of guessing from scratch.
Use cm/360 for Cross-Game Feel
eDPI is useful inside one game, but cm/360 is easier to compare across games. It tells you how far your mouse moves on the desk for a full turn. If two games have a similar cm/360, your broad arm movement should feel closer even if their sensitivity numbers look unrelated.
Keep DPI Stable
If possible, keep your mouse DPI stable while testing. Changing DPI and in-game sensitivity at the same time makes it harder to know what actually improved. Convert first, test in a practice range, then adjust in small steps.
Watch for ADS and FOV Differences
Base sensitivity conversion is a strong starting point, but some games add separate aim-down-sight multipliers, scope levels, FOV scaling, or acceleration settings. If scoped aim feels strange, check the game's ADS controls after matching your base turn distance.
Save the Setup That Works
When a conversion feels good, save the profile with the source game, target game, sensitivity, DPI, eDPI, and cm/360. A saved baseline makes it easier to return after a patch, reinstall, mouse change, or long break.