CS2 to Apex Legends
CS2 to Apex sensitivity converter.
Use this converter when you want an Apex Legends starting sensitivity from your Counter-Strike 2 setup. Enter your CS2 sensitivity and DPI, then adjust the target DPI if your Apex setup uses a different mouse DPI.
Formula
CS2 and Apex Legends commonly use the same 0.022 hip-fire yaw baseline. At the same DPI, the practical starting formula is:
Apex sensitivity = CS2 sensitivity
If you change DPI at the same time, multiply by source DPI / target DPI.
CS2 To Apex Table At 800 DPI
Use this table for quick checks when both games use 800 DPI. At matching DPI, the raw sensitivity number stays the same. The calculator is still useful if your Apex DPI is different.
| CS2 sens | Apex sens | cm/360 | CS2 eDPI | Apex eDPI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.50 | 0.500 | 103.91 | 400 | 400 |
| 0.80 | 0.800 | 64.94 | 640 | 640 |
| 1.00 | 1.000 | 51.95 | 800 | 800 |
| 1.20 | 1.200 | 43.30 | 960 | 960 |
| 1.50 | 1.500 | 34.64 | 1200 | 1200 |
| 2.00 | 2.000 | 25.98 | 1600 | 1600 |
If Your Apex DPI Is Different
If you use a different DPI in Apex, adjust the result by the DPI ratio. For example, CS2 1.00 at 800 DPI is Apex 1.000 at 800 DPI, but Apex 0.500 at 1600 DPI.
| CS2 setting | Apex DPI | Apex sens | Same baseline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.00 at 800 DPI | 400 | 2.000 | 51.95 cm/360 |
| 1.00 at 800 DPI | 800 | 1.000 | 51.95 cm/360 |
| 1.00 at 800 DPI | 1600 | 0.500 | 51.95 cm/360 |
Equivalent Settings
These settings keep the same CS2 baseline as CS2 1.00 at 800 DPI before converting to Apex. They are useful when your DPI changed but your physical turn distance did not.
| CS2 DPI | CS2 sens | CS2 eDPI | Apex at 800 DPI | cm/360 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 400 | 2.000 | 800 | 1.000 | 51.95 |
| 800 | 1.000 | 800 | 1.000 | 51.95 |
| 1600 | 0.500 | 800 | 1.000 | 51.95 |
Common Conversion Mistakes
The identical raw number at matching DPI makes this conversion look simpler than the final in-game experience:
- Expecting Apex ADS to match automatically. This page converts the hip-fire baseline only.
- Changing DPI without applying the DPI ratio to the Apex sensitivity value.
- Ignoring Apex movement, tracking, FOV, and weapon handling when testing the result.
- Making a large adjustment after one short match instead of testing small changes.
How To Tune After Converting
- Start with the converted value and test hip-fire turns, close tracking, and medium-range recoil control.
- Keep your mouse DPI fixed while tuning so you can tell which change affected the feel.
- If tracking feels too loose, reduce sensitivity by 2 to 5 percent. If turns feel heavy, raise it in small steps.
- Adjust ADS multipliers separately after your hip-fire setting feels comfortable.
Common Questions
Can I use the same CS2 sensitivity in Apex?
At the same DPI, yes. CS2 and Apex commonly use the same hip-fire yaw baseline, so the same raw sensitivity is a useful starting point. If your DPI changes, apply the DPI ratio.
Why can Apex still feel different after converting?
Apex has different movement speed, tracking demands, FOV behavior, weapon handling, and ADS options. Matching cm/360 gives you a consistent baseline, not identical gameplay.
Does this page convert Apex ADS sensitivity?
No. It converts the hip-fire baseline. Test Apex ADS multipliers separately after you settle on a comfortable hip-fire value.
What if my Apex DPI is different?
Use the target DPI field. The calculator reduces Apex sensitivity when target DPI rises and increases Apex sensitivity when target DPI falls.
Last reviewed: June 1, 2026.