Valorant mouse settings

Valorant eDPI calculator.

Use this Valorant eDPI calculator to multiply your mouse DPI by your Valorant sensitivity. It also estimates cm/360 so you can compare the same setting with a physical turn distance.

Formula

The basic Valorant eDPI formula is:

Valorant eDPI = mouse DPI x Valorant sensitivity

For the cm/360 estimate, AimScale uses the common Valorant hip-fire yaw value of 0.07.

Valorant eDPI Examples

These examples show why different DPI and sensitivity pairs can produce the same Valorant eDPI and a similar hip-fire turn distance.

DPIValorant senseDPIApprox. cm/360
4000.6024054.43
4000.7028046.65
8000.2520065.31
8000.3024054.43
8000.3528046.65
16000.12520065.31
16000.1524054.43
16000.17528046.65

Equivalent Valorant Settings

If your target is 240 eDPI, these settings are equivalent on paper:

Mouse DPIValorant sensitivityeDPIApprox. cm/360
4000.60024054.43
8000.30024054.43
16000.15024054.43

How To Use The Result

  • Use eDPI to compare Valorant settings that use different mouse DPI values.
  • Use cm/360 when comparing Valorant to another FPS game.
  • Keep DPI stable while testing so each change is easy to understand.

Common Mistakes

  • Using Valorant eDPI as a direct CS2, Apex, or Overwatch conversion. Different games can use different yaw values.
  • Changing DPI and Valorant sensitivity together without checking the final eDPI.
  • Copying a player's eDPI without considering mousepad space, role, or comfort.
  • Assuming scoped sensitivity will feel identical just because hip-fire eDPI matches.

Common Questions

Is Valorant eDPI enough for cross-game conversion?

No. Valorant eDPI is useful inside Valorant, but cross-game conversion should account for yaw values and cm/360.

What is a low Valorant eDPI?

A lower eDPI means slower aim, but the right value depends on mousepad space, role, and comfort. Use the number as a reference, not as a rule.

How do I keep the same Valorant eDPI after changing DPI?

Divide your target eDPI by the new mouse DPI. For example, 240 eDPI at 1600 DPI uses 0.150 sensitivity.

Why does cm/360 matter here?

cm/360 tells you how far the mouse physically travels for a full turn, which is easier to compare than raw sensitivity numbers.

Last reviewed: June 1, 2026.

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