Apex legends sens to minecraft8/23/2023 Relative sensitivity = sensitivity / (old FoV / new FoV) You obviously can do the same calculation when you just want to change your FoV in Apex and have your mouse movements feel the same. All we need to do is to divide the equivalent sensitivity that we just calculated by the FoV of that other game over the FoV you use in Apex. Now you could just go ahead and lower your Apex FoV to 90º to have the same feeling as you do in CS:GO or whatever, but turns you don’t have to, because we can easily calculate the correct relative sensitivity in the same way that games calculate it when you use the zoom on a weapon for example. The reason for this is that, while we did indeed calculate the mathematically correct equivalent sensitivity for you, it might not be the “tangibly” correct relative sensitivity You will rotate by the same amount of degrees with the same mouse movements, but that doesn’t necessarily mean your crosshair moves the same arbitrary distance on your screen with the same mouse movement, because that also depends on your FoV, and if they aren’t the same in both games, it’s not gonna feel the same. The entry you are looking for is called ‘mouse_sensitivity’.Īlright, after doing all that-okay, it was only two steps, calculating your equivalent sensitivity and putting it into your config-you might still end up realizing that your sensitivity feels off. That file is:Ĭ:\Users\\Saved Games\Respawn\Apex\local\settings.cfg. The solution is to open your config file and put it in there. Now that you have your mathematically correct equivalent mouse sensitivity, chances are there’s too many numbers behind the decimal point, and the menu in Apex Legends only allows for a measly single digit. 0.5555 – Fortnite (if you are using the in-game slider).0.022 – any Source Engine game (CS:GO, Apex Legends) and most id-tech 2 and later games (Quake, Doom(2016), Call of Duty, CS 1.6, etc.).Also here’s a bunch of values for popular games right now: So how do you find out what yaw a game uses? Well, you try to google it, measure it yourself (with Sensitivity Matcher for example), or see if it happens to be on. But before you go and play, note that even though you might have the mathematically correct equivalent sensitivity now, it might not feel the same yet. Let’s double check if a sensitivity of 1.89 rotates us the same amount of degrees in Apex Legends: 1.89*0.022=0.04158º. To get the same rotation per increment in Apex Legends, we calculate the sensitivity we need to use via 6.3*(0.0066/0.022)=6.3*0.3=1.89. So let’s say we use 6.3 sensitivity in Overwatch, which would rotate our view by 6.3*0.0066=0.04158º. Ergo, the formula for that would be:Ĭonverted sensitivity = old sensitivity * old yaw / new yawįor example, Overwatch has a yaw of 0.0066, and as we now know Apex uses 0.022. This means to convert your sensitivity from one game to Apex Legends and have it do the same amount of rotation per mouse increment, you need to multiply it by the yaw of that other game over 0.022. So if for example you have a sensitivity of 5 and your mouse reports an increment, the game will rotate your view by 5*0.022=0.11º in the game world. This value gets multiplied with your sensitivity and the result is the amount of degrees your view gets rotated per mouse increment. In Apex Legends for example, the default yaw is 0.022. ![]() ![]() Boring explanation in the next paragraph:Įssentially when a game transforms the delta of your recently detected mouse movement into a rotation of your view, it does so using a specific yaw value. It depends on the games inherent yaw value. Well, let me specify that a little better: Use the equivalent sensitivity, which may or may not be the same sensitivity. But let’s take this question apart by first answering as if it came from someone who has played other games in the past, because that’s easy to answer: If you have played another first or third person shooter for extended periods of time, start out using the same sensitivity. The obvious (and pretty stupid) answer to that question is: «Just use what feels right!». This post is going to answer questions like that. Mouse Sensitivity and Settings in Apex LegendsĪ set of questions that come up all the time on the Apex Legends Discord are «What sensitivity should I use?», «What DPI should I be playing at» and/or «My aim sucks, what should I do?».
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