Mouse settings
eDPI calculator for FPS games.
Use this calculator to multiply your mouse DPI by your in-game sensitivity. eDPI is useful when comparing settings inside the same FPS game or when checking whether two DPI and sensitivity pairs are equivalent.
If you searched for a CS2 eDPI calculator, CSGO eDPI calculator, Valorant eDPI calculator, or Apex eDPI calculator, start here for the formula, then use the game-specific pages linked below when you want game context and cm/360 estimates.
Formula
The formula is simple:
eDPI = mouse DPI x in-game sensitivity
For example, 800 DPI with 0.30 sensitivity is 240 eDPI. If you move to 1600 DPI and want the same eDPI in the same game, use 0.15 sensitivity.
Quick Examples
These examples show how different DPI and sensitivity pairs can produce the same eDPI. The comparison is most useful inside one game.
| DPI | Sensitivity | eDPI | Equivalent note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 400 | 0.60 | 240 | Same as 800 DPI at 0.30 |
| 800 | 0.30 | 240 | Common Valorant-style example |
| 1600 | 0.15 | 240 | Same in-game eDPI as above |
| 400 | 2.00 | 800 | Same as 800 DPI at 1.00 |
| 800 | 1.00 | 800 | Common CS2-style example |
| 1600 | 0.50 | 800 | Same in-game eDPI as above |
Equivalent Sensitivity Table
If you know your target eDPI, divide it by your mouse DPI. This table gives quick reference values for common DPI settings.
| Target eDPI | 400 DPI sens | 800 DPI sens | 1600 DPI sens |
|---|---|---|---|
| 200 | 0.500 | 0.250 | 0.125 |
| 240 | 0.600 | 0.300 | 0.150 |
| 320 | 0.800 | 0.400 | 0.200 |
| 800 | 2.000 | 1.000 | 0.500 |
| 1200 | 3.000 | 1.500 | 0.750 |
When eDPI Helps
- Comparing two settings inside the same game.
- Changing mouse DPI while keeping the same in-game feel.
- Understanding why 400 DPI at 2.0 can match 800 DPI at 1.0.
- Checking whether a copied player setting is actually fast or slow for your DPI.
Common Mistakes
- Using eDPI as a direct cross-game converter. Valorant eDPI and CS2 eDPI do not share the same game scale.
- Changing DPI and sensitivity together without calculating the final eDPI.
- Copying a player's sensitivity but forgetting their DPI, which can make the copied setting completely different.
- Ignoring cm/360 when the real question is physical mouse travel.
Important Limitation
eDPI is not enough for cross-game conversion because different games can use different sensitivity scales and yaw values. For cross-game comparison, use cm/360 or a game-aware converter.
Choose The Right eDPI Page
The general calculator is best for quick math. Use a game-specific eDPI page when you want examples and physical turn-distance context for one game scale.
| Search intent | Best page | Use it for |
|---|---|---|
| edpi calculator | General eDPI calculator | Fast DPI x sensitivity math. |
| cs2 edpi calculator / csgo edpi calculator | CS2 eDPI calculator | Counter-Strike examples and CS2 cm/360 context. |
| valorant edpi calculator | Valorant eDPI calculator | Valorant sensitivity, DPI, and cm/360 estimates. |
| apex edpi calculator | Apex Legends eDPI calculator | Apex hip-fire sensitivity and DPI comparisons. |
Common Questions
Is 800 eDPI always the same?
It is comparable inside one game, but not across every game. Different games can use different yaw values and sensitivity scales.
What is the difference between DPI and eDPI?
DPI is your mouse setting. eDPI is DPI multiplied by in-game sensitivity, which makes it easier to compare two settings in the same game.
Can I convert games with eDPI only?
No. For cross-game conversion, use cm/360 or a converter that accounts for each game's yaw value.
How do I keep the same eDPI after changing DPI?
Divide your current eDPI by the new DPI. For example, 240 eDPI at 1600 DPI uses 0.150 sensitivity.
Last reviewed: June 11, 2026.