Valorant to Apex Legends
Valorant to Apex sensitivity converter.
Use this page when you want an Apex Legends starting sensitivity from your Valorant setup. The result matches a similar 360 turn distance, then adjusts for DPI if your Apex mouse setting is different.
Formula
Using common yaw values, Valorant uses 0.07 and Apex Legends uses 0.022. At the same DPI, the practical starting formula is:
Apex sensitivity = Valorant sensitivity x 3.181818
If you change DPI at the same time, multiply by source DPI / target DPI.
Valorant To Apex Table At 800 DPI
Use this table for quick checks when both games use 800 DPI. The calculator is still better if your Apex DPI is different.
| Valorant sens | Apex sens | cm/360 | Valorant eDPI | Apex eDPI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.15 | 0.477 | 108.86 | 120 | 382 |
| 0.20 | 0.636 | 81.64 | 160 | 509 |
| 0.25 | 0.795 | 65.31 | 200 | 636 |
| 0.30 | 0.955 | 54.43 | 240 | 764 |
| 0.35 | 1.114 | 46.65 | 280 | 891 |
| 0.40 | 1.273 | 40.82 | 320 | 1018 |
| 0.45 | 1.432 | 36.29 | 360 | 1145 |
| 0.50 | 1.591 | 32.66 | 400 | 1273 |
| 0.60 | 1.909 | 27.21 | 480 | 1527 |
If Your Apex DPI Is Different
If you use a different DPI in Apex, adjust the result by the DPI ratio. For example, Valorant 0.30 at 800 DPI is about Apex 0.955 at 800 DPI, but about Apex 0.477 at 1600 DPI.
| Valorant setting | Apex DPI | Apex sens | Same baseline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.30 at 800 DPI | 400 | 1.909 | 54.43 cm/360 |
| 0.30 at 800 DPI | 800 | 0.955 | 54.43 cm/360 |
| 0.30 at 800 DPI | 1600 | 0.477 | 54.43 cm/360 |
Equivalent Settings
These settings keep the same Valorant baseline as Valorant 0.30 at 800 DPI before converting to Apex. They help when you changed mouse DPI but want the same physical turn distance.
| Valorant DPI | Valorant sens | Valorant eDPI | Apex at 800 DPI | cm/360 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 400 | 0.600 | 240 | 0.955 | 54.43 |
| 800 | 0.300 | 240 | 0.955 | 54.43 |
| 1600 | 0.150 | 240 | 0.955 | 54.43 |
Common Conversion Mistakes
Most mistakes happen when players move from Valorant's tactical pacing into Apex tracking, movement, and frequent close-range fights:
- Keeping the same raw sensitivity number in Apex. Valorant and Apex use different sensitivity scales.
- Comparing Valorant eDPI and Apex eDPI as if they mean the same thing across games.
- Changing DPI and sensitivity at the same time without checking the final cm/360.
- Expecting Apex ADS or per-optic settings to match from a hip-fire conversion alone.
How To Tune After Converting
- Start with the converted value and test hip-fire turns, close tracking, and recoil control.
- If tracking feels too loose, lower the value by 2 to 5 percent.
- If wide turns feel too slow, raise the value in small steps instead of jumping to a new sensitivity.
- Adjust Apex ADS multipliers separately after the hip-fire baseline feels comfortable.
Common Questions
Is Valorant 0.30 close to Apex 0.955?
At the same DPI, yes. That value is a useful hip-fire starting point based on matching cm/360 between Valorant and Apex.
Should I keep my Valorant eDPI in Apex?
No. eDPI is useful inside one game, but Valorant and Apex use different sensitivity scales. Use a yaw-aware conversion or cm/360 instead.
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 settings?
No. It converts the hip-fire baseline. Test Apex ADS and per-optic settings separately after choosing a comfortable hip-fire value.
Last reviewed: June 1, 2026.