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eDPI & Sensitivity Converter

Calculate eDPI and cm/360, and convert mouse sens between CS2, Valorant & more.

Updated July 8, 2026

How to use the edpi & sensitivity converter

  1. 1Enter your mouse DPI (check your mouse software; 400/800/1600 are the standards).
  2. 2Pick your main game and enter its in-game sensitivity.
  3. 3Read your eDPI and cm/360.
  4. 4Copy the converted sens values into the other games' settings.

Common uses

  • Keeping identical aim when switching between CS2 and Valorant
  • Comparing your eDPI to pro ranges before blaming your settings
  • Standardizing sens after buying a mouse with a different DPI
  • Dialing a new game to your established cm/360 on day one

Frequently asked questions

What is eDPI and why does it matter more than sens alone?

eDPI = mouse DPI × in-game sensitivity — the true combined sensitivity. A player at 400 DPI / 2.0 sens and one at 800 DPI / 1.0 sens have identical 800 eDPI and identical aim feel. Comparing raw in-game sens without DPI is meaningless.

How does converting between games actually work?

Each engine turns a different number of degrees per mouse count at sens 1.0 (its yaw): CS2 uses 0.022°, Valorant 0.07°. Matching cm/360 across games means scaling by the yaw ratio — CS2 sens × 0.3143 = Valorant sens. That's what the converter computes, at your DPI.

What's a normal cm/360?

Tactical FPS pros mostly live between 30 and 60 cm per full turn — deliberately low sensitivity for precise micro-adjustments, using the whole mousepad. Under 20 cm/360 is high-sens territory: fast turns, harder fine aim. There's no correct number, but consistency across games is why this tool exists.

Does Windows pointer speed affect this?

It can ruin it. Games reading raw input ignore Windows settings, but anything else gets scaled — keep Windows sensitivity at 6/11 with 'enhance pointer precision' off so your DPI means what it says.

About this tool

The eDPI calculator computes the two numbers that actually describe mouse sensitivity — eDPI (DPI × in-game sens) and cm/360 (physical mousepad distance for a full turn) — and converts your sensitivity between games so your aim transfers intact. Conversions use each engine's yaw value (degrees rotated per mouse count), which is the only method that preserves the physical distance your hand moves, and therefore your muscle memory. Supported: CS2/CS:GO, Valorant, Apex Legends, Overwatch 2, and Quake/TF2. CS2 inputs also get context against the pro range (~600–1100 eDPI), because 'is my sens too high' is the question everyone is actually asking.

Like most tools on UtilityBase, the edpi & sensitivity converter runs entirely in your browser — nothing you enter is uploaded or stored on a server. It's free to use with no account required. Browse more calculators here.

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