Valorant Sensitivity Finder & Converter
This free Sensitivity Finder helps you calculate a good starting Valorant sens, see your eDPI, and convert from other games like CS2, Apex, Overwatch 2 and Fortnite. Use it together with our PSA Method calculator and Aim Setup Wizard to lock a sens that actually feels consistent across your entire aim routine.
Sensitivity Finder & Converter (Valorant 2026)
Plug in your DPI and current sens, choose your playstyle, and we’ll give you a recommended Valorant sens range plus conversions from other games.
1. Your current setup
Once you add DPI and sens, we’ll show your approximate eDPI.
2. Valorant sensitivity finder
Range: —
Notes: Enter your values and click the button to see a suggested range.
3. Convert another game to Valorant
This is a mathematical match, you can then fine-tune using the Finder above.
After locking a sens, combine it with a clear crosshair and video settings. You can build a full aim profile using our Valorant Aim Setup Wizard .
How to use this Valorant Sensitivity Finder
The tool is designed so a brand-new player or someone switching from CS2, Apex or other shooters can lock a usable Valorant sens in a few minutes.
- Enter your current DPI and main game (Valorant, CS2, Apex, Overwatch 2 or Fortnite).
- Type your current in-game sensitivity for that title.
- Pick your Valorant playstyle: balanced, flicky Duelist, or anchor Controller/Sentinel.
- Click “Find my Valorant sensitivity” to see a recommended sens and range.
- Optional: use the converter to copy another game’s sens over to Valorant, then refine it with the Finder result.
Once you have a range, we recommend playing at least 3–5 full games on the middle value before making small adjustments. Treat it like a “good baseline” rather than something you must constantly change every day.
Use cases: When should you use this tool?
- New to Valorant: You’re coming from another FPS and don’t want your aim to feel totally different.
- Switching DPI or mouse: You changed hardware and want to keep roughly the same eDPI.
- Trying a new role: You’re moving from flicky Duelist to a calmer Controller/Sentinel setup.
- PSA Method follow-up: You ran our PSA test and want a fast way to get a practical in-game range.
eDPI and playstyle comparison
The table below shows rough eDPI bands this tool targets for different playstyles. These are not hard rules, but they give context for the numbers you’ll see.
| Playstyle | Approx. eDPI band | Example Valorant sens @ 800 DPI | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anchor / Controller | 180–260 | 0.23 – 0.33 | Holding angles, smoking, calm spray control. |
| Balanced rifle | 220–320 | 0.28 – 0.40 | Mix of rifles, pistols and some flicks. |
| Flicky Duelist | 300–380 | 0.38 – 0.48 | Entry fights, hard flicks, closer angles. |
FAQ: Sensitivity Finder and PSA Method
Is this Sensitivity Finder enough, or should I also use PSA Method?
The Finder is great for quick, realistic ranges that feel good in-game right away. The PSA Method calculator is better if you want to run a proper test and lock a very precise cm/360. The best combo is to run PSA once, then use the Finder and our Aim Setup Wizard to build an aim profile around that value.
Why does the tool give me a range instead of one exact number?
Sensitivity is personal and depends on desk space, arm vs wrist usage and your mouse pad. A small range lets you fine-tune based on comfort without drifting too far every time you miss a shot. Staying inside a narrow band is more important than chasing a magic exact number.
Should I change my sens for every agent or map?
No. It’s better to keep one core sens across all agents and maps so your muscle memory stays consistent. If you really need a change, keep it tiny inside the suggested range. Most pros play the same sens on Duelists, Controllers and Sentinels alike.