Sensitivity Calculator

Convert your mouse sensitivity between games using this Sensitivity Calculator. Enter your From Sensitivity, From DPI, and To DPI to get your converted sensitivity that maintains the same feel across different games. You can also calculate your cm/360° — the centimeters of mouse movement needed to rotate a full 360 degrees — making it a universal reference for matching aim across any title.

Your current in-game sensitivity value

DPI

Your current mouse DPI setting

DPI

Your target mouse DPI setting

cm

Optional: used to calculate how many full 360° rotations fit on your pad

Results

Converted Sensitivity

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eDPI (Source)

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eDPI (Target)

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cm / 360°

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360° Rotations on Pad

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eDPI Comparison: Source vs Target

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a sensitivity converter and why do I need one?

A sensitivity converter translates your in-game sensitivity from one game or DPI setting to another so your muscle memory stays intact. Different games use different sensitivity scales, so a raw number like '2.5' means very different things across titles. By matching your effective sensitivity, you maintain the same physical mouse movement per 360° rotation.

What is eDPI and how is it calculated?

eDPI stands for effective DPI and is calculated by multiplying your in-game sensitivity by your mouse DPI (eDPI = sensitivity × DPI). It gives a single universal number representing your true sensitivity regardless of which DPI or sensitivity setting you use. Two players with different DPI and in-game sensitivity values can have the same eDPI — and therefore the same aim feel.

What does cm/360° mean?

cm/360° is the number of centimeters you need to physically move your mouse to rotate a full 360 degrees in-game. It's a hardware-independent measurement that lets you compare sensitivities across any game or mouse. Lower values mean faster, more twitchy aim; higher values mean slower, more precise movement.

How do I convert sensitivity between two different DPI settings?

The formula is simple: New Sensitivity = (From Sensitivity × From DPI) ÷ To DPI. This keeps your eDPI constant, meaning the physical movement required for any given rotation stays exactly the same. This calculator does that math automatically when you fill in your values.

Does changing DPI change how my mouse actually moves?

Yes and no. Changing DPI changes how many pixels the cursor moves per inch of physical movement. However, if you adjust your in-game sensitivity inversely (which this calculator computes for you), the actual aim feel remains identical. Some players prefer higher DPI with lower in-game sensitivity to reduce input lag at the hardware level.

What is a good cm/360° for FPS games?

Most professional FPS players use a cm/360° range of roughly 20–80 cm. Valorant and CS2 pros often sit between 25–50 cm, while some prefer higher values for more precise flicks. There is no universally 'best' value — it depends on your play style, game genre, and desk space.

Why do some games feel different even at the same eDPI?

Some games apply additional multipliers, FOV differences, or raw input vs acceleration settings that affect the actual feel even at identical eDPI values. Advanced converters like mouse-sensitivity.com account for per-game multipliers. This calculator gives you the baseline conversion, which works well for most games using a standard linear sensitivity scale.

Can I use this calculator to match sensitivity across all games?

This calculator gives you the correct converted sensitivity for any DPI change and computes your cm/360° as a universal reference. For game-to-game conversions that involve unique sensitivity scales (e.g. Overwatch to Valorant), you would also need each game's sensitivity multiplier. Use the cm/360° output as your universal anchor when switching between titles.

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