How to Convert Your CS2 Sensitivity to Valorant (Without Guessing)
Swapping from CS2 to Valorant and your aim feels scuffed? This guide shows you the exact CS2 → Valorant sensitivity math, common mistakes to avoid, and how to use the BattlePooja Valorant Sensitivity Finder & Converter 2026 so you never have to “guess a sens” again.

Why copying your CS2 sens to Valorant feels wrong
If you just type your CS2 sensitivity number into Valorant, your aim will almost never feel the same. That’s because both games use different internal scales, yaw values and FOV handling, so “1.5 sens” means something completely different in each engine.
What actually matters is keeping your cm/360 and muscle memory consistent. Once that matches between CS2 and Valorant, your flicks and tracking feel familiar from the first match – and you stop wasting nights “finding a new perfect sens” every time you swap games.
The exact CS2 → Valorant sensitivity formula
If you like seeing the raw numbers, here’s the quick version of the math most converters use:
Valorant Sensitivity ≈ CS2 Sensitivity ÷ 3.18
A few examples:
| CS2 sens | Approx. Valorant sens | Feel |
|---|---|---|
| 1.0 | 0.31 | Very close to the same cm/360 if DPI is identical. |
| 1.5 | 0.47 | Comfortable “mid” sens for most players. |
| 2.0 | 0.63 | Fast, but still controllable if you’re used to it in CS2. |
You can absolutely do this math by hand, but it’s very easy to mistype or forget decimals. That’s why we built a dedicated Valorant sens converter that handles CS2 → Valorant instantly, including eDPI and cm/360.
The no‑math method: use our CS2 → Valorant sens converter
Instead of dividing by 3.18 on a calculator and praying you didn’t fat‑finger a number, you can plug everything into our free tool: Valorant Sensitivity Finder & Sens Converter 2026 .
It’s built specifically for Valorant players who swap from games like CS2, Apex and Overwatch and want:
- Exact CS2 → Valorant sensitivity with the correct multiplier.
- Automatic eDPI calculation so you see the “real” sensitivity you’re playing on.
- Estimated cm/360 so you can compare with pros or your old configs.
- A simple UI – no dropdown hell, just “from CS2, to Valorant, here’s your sens.”
The rest of this guide walks you through the full process so you can copy‑paste numbers confidently instead of guessing a random sens every new patch.
Step‑by‑step: match your CS2 sens in Valorant
Step 1 – Grab your CS2 settings
Open CS2 and write down:
- Your mouse DPI (from your mouse software or Windows).
- Your in‑game CS2 sensitivity (e.g. 1.5).
- Confirm that
m_yawis at the default 0.022 (unless you changed it on purpose).
Step 2 – Convert with the BattlePooja sens tool
Go to Valorant Sensitivity Finder & Sens Converter 2026 and:
- Select CS2 as your “from” game and Valorant as your “to” game.
- Enter your DPI and CS2 sensitivity.
- Click convert – you’ll get an exact Valorant sensitivity, your new eDPI and cm/360.
This uses the same trusted multiplier (around 3.18) behind the scenes, but you don’t have to touch the math yourself.
Step 3 – Paste the sens into Valorant
Now open Valorant and go to:
- Settings → General → Mouse → Sensitivity: Aim.
Paste the number from the converter (for example 0.47) and don’t touch it for a while. The whole point of converting is to keep your aim consistent, so avoid changing it every match unless you’re doing structured tests.
Step 4 – Lock in your base aim settings
To actually feel “at home” in Valorant, sensitivity alone isn’t enough. Use:
- Valorant Aim Setup Wizard to quickly dial in crosshair, ADS, scoped sens and FPS caps around your new sensitivity.
- Our PSA Method Calculator inside the Sensitivity Finder page (or linked from it) to run a quick PSA test and nudge your converted sens slightly if you overshoot or undershoot a lot.
How to fine‑tune after converting (PSA + Aim Setup Wizard)
Even with a perfect CS2 → Valorant conversion, you might feel a tiny bit off because of different gun behavior, maps and peeking angles. That’s normal – you just need a small fine‑tune, not a full reset.
Use PSA as a “micro‑adjust” instead of a full search
Our recommended approach:
- Convert from CS2 to Valorant using the Sensitivity Finder.
- Run a short PSA session (10–15 minutes) using that value as your starting point.
- Adjust by a very small amount (for example ±0.02) if your PSA results are consistently low.
This way, you respect your existing CS2 muscle memory and only make micro‑corrections for Valorant’s feel instead of random full jumps like 0.4 → 0.8 → 0.3.
Use the Aim Setup Wizard to keep everything consistent
Once your sens is locked, run through the Valorant Aim Setup Wizard to:
- Match your scoped/ADS sens so the Operator or Guardian don’t feel “faster” or “slower” than hip‑fire.
- Fix FPS caps and frame pacing so micro‑stutters don’t ruin your tracking.
- Save your final config so you can restore it if you reinstall the game or test other setups.
FAQ: CS2 → Valorant sensitivity conversion
Is CS2 sensitivity the same as Valorant sensitivity?
No. Both games use different internal scales, so the same number will not give you the same cm/360. That’s why you need to convert your CS2 sensitivity (usually by dividing by about 3.18) or just use a converter like the BattlePooja Valorant Sensitivity Finder & Converter 2026.
Do I need to match eDPI or cm/360 between CS2 and Valorant?
The goal is to match your physical movement – cm/360 – not necessarily the raw eDPI number. Our converter calculates both for you so you can compare, but if your cm/360 is the same in both games, your muscle memory will feel right even if the eDPI values look different on paper.
Can I convert Valorant sensitivity back to CS2 with the same tool?
Yes. The same underlying math works in both directions. In the Sensitivity Finder, simply set Valorant as your “from” game and CS2 as your “to” game, enter DPI + sens and you’ll get the correct CS2 value that matches your Valorant cm/360.
How long should I stick with my converted sensitivity before changing it?
At least a few full game sessions or a week of normal play. Converting from CS2 gives you a strong starting point, but your brain still needs some time to adapt to Valorant’s recoil and peeking. Use PSA and the Aim Setup Wizard for tiny adjustments instead of constantly restarting your sens search.


Hi, I’m Pooja—Gamer, Creator, and Performance Tool Builder. After grinding in Valorant, I realized competitive players needed clean, data-driven calculators without the heavy ads. I created BattlePooja to bridge the gap between technical hardware optimization and in-game mechanical skill.