well i only play quake live for fps games and i use accel. moving only my wrist from left to right=about a 180, and then i tweak the accel so when i flick i can turn around fast. once you get used to it its actually pretty comfortable, the only thing that suffers is tracking with lg
I reduced my sens from 3 to 1.5 and i found out my tracking went from 20% to 50% (of course i only tried the 1.5 with bots and the 20% was against real players)
i kind of switch back and forth from using accel and no accel. when i turn accel on i hit much harder with rail and rocket for some reason. tracking is better without accel. i could use the individual weapon settings to use accel with everything other than lg, but getting used to those sensitivity switches would be too annoying
ive reach an autistic breaking point recently cause i always used to play on high sens but after trying out counter and reducing my sens i am able to track better but i cant get used to low sens and arm movement.
you need to use a lower sens for cs because you need to be very accurate. just look at what the pros use for sensitivities. i think theres only a handful who use lower than 35cm/360, most use somewhere around 50cm/360
ill guess ill just have to get used to the idea that cs will always have a different sens than my other games. at least i had some benefits from this and i have lowered my tf2 sens from 3 800dpi to 1.75 800 dpi.
If you are feeling sweaty tryhard enough you could watch back footage and see if you are over or under compensating on your tracking and flicks and adjust accordingly, at the end of the day sensitivity should be adapted to you and how you use your mousepad surface
When playing FPS, I try to adjust it to 800 eDPI. For example, in counter-strike it's 400 dpi and 2.0 sens. Yes, I could have just use 1600 dpi and have my sens as 0.5. But placebo effect is hell of a thing. It just doesn't feel right.
well i only play quake live for fps games and i use accel. moving only my wrist from left to right=about a 180, and then i tweak the accel so when i flick i can turn around fast. once you get used to it its actually pretty comfortable, the only thing that suffers is tracking with lg
I reduced my sens from 3 to 1.5 and i found out my tracking went from 20% to 50% (of course i only tried the 1.5 with bots and the 20% was against real players)
i kind of switch back and forth from using accel and no accel. when i turn accel on i hit much harder with rail and rocket for some reason. tracking is better without accel. i could use the individual weapon settings to use accel with everything other than lg, but getting used to those sensitivity switches would be too annoying
ive reach an autistic breaking point recently cause i always used to play on high sens but after trying out counter and reducing my sens i am able to track better but i cant get used to low sens and arm movement.
you need to use a lower sens for cs because you need to be very accurate. just look at what the pros use for sensitivities. i think theres only a handful who use lower than 35cm/360, most use somewhere around 50cm/360
ill guess ill just have to get used to the idea that cs will always have a different sens than my other games. at least i had some benefits from this and i have lowered my tf2 sens from 3 800dpi to 1.75 800 dpi.
If you are feeling sweaty tryhard enough you could watch back footage and see if you are over or under compensating on your tracking and flicks and adjust accordingly, at the end of the day sensitivity should be adapted to you and how you use your mousepad surface
Generally I use 34cm/360 for most games and 28cm/360 for faster ones.
Keeping the same 360 sens helps more with movement rather than aim.
1000 eDPI should be the standard everyone starts out at and then you can go higher or lower depending on your preference
edpi 800*.35
When playing RTS, I've got used to my 1600 dpi.
When playing FPS, I try to adjust it to 800 eDPI. For example, in counter-strike it's 400 dpi and 2.0 sens. Yes, I could have just use 1600 dpi and have my sens as 0.5. But placebo effect is hell of a thing. It just doesn't feel right.
3000 DPI * 1 on any game except for Battlebit, for some reason it felt too fricking fast compared to other games
3200 DPI * 4 in CS and TF2. I'm really bad at CS.
low irl dpi, high in game sense
400 dpi and 2.8 sens in both cs and tf2 (scout main)
800 Dpi
.8 sens in CS
i usually stay around 40cm/360
400 dpi, 2.2 sens in source games
whatever the default is. i've never adjusted it in my life. just learn the game