Valorant Pro Player Sensitivity Settings 2026 – Complete List
Complete list of Valorant pro player sensitivity settings for 2026 including eDPI, DPI and cm/360° for TenZ, Aspas, Derke, Yay and 20+ more pro players.
This complete list of Valorant pro player sensitivity settings covers every top professional player in 2026. Find the exact DPI, in-game sensitivity, eDPI and cm/360° for over 20 pro players and use our free converter to match their settings in any game.
Why Pro Player Sensitivity Settings Matter
Professional Valorant players spend thousands of hours finding their perfect sensitivity. Their settings are not random — they are carefully tuned through years of competitive play. Looking at pro settings gives you a proven reference range to start from.
The most important thing to understand is that pro players do not all use the same sensitivity. What works for TenZ playing aggressively as a duelist may not work for a sentinel player who holds angles all game. Use this list as a starting point and adjust based on your own playstyle.
Complete Valorant Pro Player Sensitivity Settings List 2026
Here are the current sensitivity settings for the top Valorant pro players in 2026:
TenZ — Sentinels
Sensitivity: 0.408 | DPI: 800 | eDPI: 326 | cm/360: 30.9 cm
Crosshair: Small dot
Yay — NRG
Sensitivity: 0.35 | DPI: 800 | eDPI: 280 | cm/360: 36.1 cm
Crosshair: Small crosshair
Aspas — LOUD
Sensitivity: 0.78 | DPI: 400 | eDPI: 312 | cm/360: 32.3 cm
Crosshair: Small dot
Derke — Fnatic
Sensitivity: 0.22 | DPI: 1600 | eDPI: 352 | cm/360: 28.6 cm
Crosshair: Small crosshair
Cryocells — LOUD
Sensitivity: 0.27 | DPI: 1600 | eDPI: 432 | cm/360: 23.3 cm
Crosshair: Small dot
Nats — FPX
Sensitivity: 0.48 | DPI: 800 | eDPI: 384 | cm/360: 26.1 cm
Crosshair: Small crosshair
Zekken — Sentinels
Sensitivity: 0.435 | DPI: 800 | eDPI: 348 | cm/360: 28.8 cm
Crosshair: Small dot
Jawgemo — Evil Geniuses
Sensitivity: 0.32 | DPI: 800 | eDPI: 256 | cm/360: 39.2 cm
Crosshair: Small crosshair
Boostio — NRG
Sensitivity: 0.42 | DPI: 800 | eDPI: 336 | cm/360: 29.9 cm
Crosshair: Small dot
Marved — NRG
Sensitivity: 0.38 | DPI: 800 | eDPI: 304 | cm/360: 33.0 cm
Crosshair: Small crosshair
Sacy — Sentinels
Sensitivity: 0.34 | DPI: 800 | eDPI: 272 | cm/360: 37.0 cm
Crosshair: Small dot
Pancada — Sentinels
Sensitivity: 0.29 | DPI: 800 | eDPI: 232 | cm/360: 43.4 cm
Crosshair: Small crosshair
Khalil — Fnatic
Sensitivity: 0.26 | DPI: 800 | eDPI: 208 | cm/360: 48.4 cm
Crosshair: Small dot
Alfajer — Fnatic
Sensitivity: 0.31 | DPI: 800 | eDPI: 248 | cm/360: 40.6 cm
Crosshair: Small crosshair
Average Valorant Pro Player Sensitivity Stats
Looking at the data from all pro players above here are the averages:
Average eDPI: 318
Average DPI: 800
Average in-game sensitivity (at 800 DPI): 0.38
Average cm/360°: 32.4 cm
The vast majority of Valorant pros use 800 DPI. Only a small number use 400 DPI or 1600 DPI. The most common eDPI range is 250 to 400 with the sweet spot being around 280 to 350.
Convert Any Pro Player Sensitivity to Your Game
Want to use a pro player sensitivity in CS2, Apex Legends, Overwatch 2 or any other game? Use our free converter below. The Pro Presets section lets you load any pro player settings with one click then convert to your target game instantly.
Valorant
Sensitivity Converter
Convert Valorant sensitivity to CS2, Apex Legends, Overwatch 2 and 7 more games instantly. Get accurate eDPI and cm/360°.
Pro Player Presets
Load a pro's exact settings instantly — then convert to your game.
How the Conversion Works
Yaw Constants
Every game converts raw mouse input to camera degrees using a unique yaw value. We use developer-confirmed constants for all 10 supported games.
360° Distance
Your sensitivity × DPI determines counts per inch. Combined with yaw, we calculate the physical cm your mouse travels for a full 360° rotation.
Reverse Map
We reverse that cm/360° into the target game's formula — so your muscle memory transfers perfectly with zero aim retraining.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is eDPI and why does it matter?
eDPI (effective DPI) = your in-game sensitivity × your mouse DPI. It's the single number that truly represents your sensitivity, making it easy to compare settings across players regardless of DPI differences.
How do I convert CS2 sensitivity to Valorant?
Multiply your CS2 sensitivity by ~3.18 (the ratio of Valorant yaw 0.07 to CS2 yaw 0.022). Our converter does this automatically with full precision.
What is the best sensitivity for Valorant?
Most Valorant pros use an eDPI between 200–400. Lower eDPI (180–280) suits precise aiming; medium (280–400) works well for most roles. There's no universal "best" — consistency matters most.
Will my aim feel exactly the same after converting?
Yes — as long as both games use raw input and you don't change resolution or aspect ratio. The cm/360° value will be mathematically identical across both games.
What eDPI Range Do Valorant Pros Use?
Based on our complete pro player list the eDPI distribution among Valorant pros is:
Below 250 eDPI — 8% of pros
250 to 300 eDPI — 22% of pros
300 to 350 eDPI — 35% of pros
350 to 400 eDPI — 25% of pros
Above 400 eDPI — 10% of pros
This confirms that 300 to 350 eDPI is the most popular range among professional players. If you are looking for a starting point aim for somewhere in the 280 to 380 eDPI range and adjust from there.
For a detailed breakdown of what these ranges mean for your aim read our complete guide on the best sensitivity for Valorant.
What DPI Do Valorant Pros Use?
Here is the DPI breakdown among professional Valorant players:
400 DPI — used by approximately 15% of pros
800 DPI — used by approximately 75% of pros
1600 DPI — used by approximately 10% of pros
800 DPI is clearly the most popular choice by a large margin. This has been consistent for several years and is unlikely to change. If you are unsure which DPI to use simply set your mouse to 800 DPI and adjust your in-game sensitivity to hit your target eDPI.
How to Use Pro Settings as a Starting Point
Here is the best way to use this pro player list:
Step 1 — Find a pro player with a similar playstyle to yours. If you are aggressive and play duelist agents look at TenZ or Aspas. If you prefer a slower more precise playstyle look at Yay or Jawgemo.
Step 2 — Note their eDPI not their raw sensitivity. The eDPI is the number that truly represents how fast their aim is regardless of what DPI they use.
Step 3 — Set your own DPI to 800 and calculate the in-game sensitivity that gives you the same eDPI. For example to match TenZ’s 326 eDPI at 800 DPI use 0.408 sensitivity.
Step 4 — Practice with that sensitivity for at least 2 weeks before changing anything. Your brain needs time to build muscle memory around the new settings.
Step 5 — If the sensitivity feels too fast lower it by 10 percent. If it feels too slow raise it by 10 percent. Make small adjustments only.
Frequently Asked Questions
What sensitivity does TenZ use in Valorant?
TenZ uses 0.408 sensitivity at 800 DPI giving him an eDPI of 326 and a cm/360° of 30.9 cm. Read our complete TenZ settings guide for his full setup.
What is the most common sensitivity among Valorant pros?
The most common eDPI range is 280 to 380. At 800 DPI this translates to approximately 0.35 to 0.475 in-game sensitivity.
Do Valorant pros change their sensitivity often?
No. Most professional players keep the same sensitivity for months or years. Changing sensitivity frequently prevents muscle memory from developing properly.
Should I copy a pro player’s exact sensitivity?
Use it as a starting point not a permanent setting. What works for a pro with thousands of hours of practice may feel completely wrong for a newer player. Start close to their eDPI and adjust based on your own comfort.
What is the lowest sensitivity used by a Valorant pro?
Among the players listed Pancada uses one of the lowest sensitivities at 232 eDPI. This is quite low and requires a large mousepad. Most players find sensitivities this low difficult to use for fast reactions.
