Settings Guide
How to Convert Mouse Sensitivity Between Games
Moving from one shooter to another can make your aim feel wrong even when your mouse DPI has not changed. That is because games use different sensitivity scales. A sensitivity converter helps translate the same physical mouse movement into a similar turn distance.
What eDPI Means
eDPI means effective DPI. It is usually your mouse DPI multiplied by your in-game sensitivity. It is useful for comparing settings inside one game, but it is not always enough for cross-game conversion because each game can use a different yaw value.
Why cm/360 Helps
cm/360 measures how far your mouse travels to rotate your view 360 degrees. If two games have similar cm/360 values, your hand movement will usually feel more familiar.
Best Practice
Use the Pixel Roll sensitivity converter as a starting point, then test in a practice range. Keep your DPI consistent, check your FOV, and make small adjustments after a few rounds instead of changing settings after every missed shot.
Do Not Copy Settings Blindly
Pro settings can be useful references, but they are not magic numbers. Mouse pad size, grip style, desk space, monitor distance, and role all change what feels usable. A low-sensitivity anchor player may want a different feel than a fast entry player who clears tight corners.
When to Change Your Sensitivity
If you constantly over-flick past targets, your sensitivity may be too high. If you cannot turn fast enough or run out of mouse pad during normal fights, it may be too low. Change one variable at a time, then play enough rounds to know whether the new setting actually helps.
Keep a Settings Note
Write down your DPI, sensitivity, FOV, and cm/360 for each game you play often. This makes it much easier to return to a comfortable setup after testing new gear, switching games, reinstalling a title, or helping a friend match your baseline.