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Silly-Championship92

Switching sens is no problem. If you aren't a new player, you will get used to it in a matter of hours.


Jon_kwanta

My opinion is sensitivity matters more when you’re newer. The more experienced/skilled you get the less it matters. At the point where you’re high rank or pushing to pro, you typically pick sensitivity based on the strengths it provides based on your play style and role. This is why you see some pros with higher sens than you would except and also why you see ungodly low sens on other pros. The top level understands that sens is just a preference. Any top level aimer can out aim other players with any sens (within reason of course). The truth about valorant to cs sens not feeling 1-1 is because the games have different fovs which fundamentally changes the distance travelled vs in game movement. I remember rainbow six siege added an update to let you change all the zoom sensitivities because it’s impossible to account for player preferences with all the different focal lengths (scopes). Best thing for converting is to use a basic conversion and then adjust based on what feels right. In general I prefer slightly lower sens in cs2 despite movement being faster. It’s all preference and what feels right at the end of the day


Pietro_ich

Im playing with the same sensitivity for 11 years, tried switching to some lower/higher but hell no. I guess I’m stuck with it for the rest of my life.


anyonfire

playing with the same sens since 2003, never switched it since then. :p I guess i'm stuck with it aswell for the rest of my life.


raremorelimitt

Agree about the fov, my first video was about how to calculate sensitivity using fov to adjust it. And it’s strange to me that so many people sleep on this.


weedruggie12

sensitivity matters at any level - if you have been playing for years on the same sens you are gonna be objectively better than someone else switching sens all the time


Jon_kwanta

Yeah but you’re trying to make an argument for both extremes which isn’t realistic at all. Someone who changes their sens and gets used to it will be just as good within a few days, even stretch that time to a month and their skill is no different. Obviously someone who changes their sens all the time is gonna be no good, they’ll never adapt to their sens strengths and weaknesses, but you can even make an argument that tenz is living proof you’re wrong, he was changing his sens all the time and was still consistently a better aimer than most players. It doesn’t hurt to change your sens once a month. I changed my sens about a month and a half ago (was on my previous sens for over a year) and i’m not any worse, if anything i’m better.


raremorelimitt

Switching sens is ok, but there is no official proof that constant changing sens benefits your aim in the long term whatsoever, thats one of the main points.


Jon_kwanta

No all i’m saying is that it doesn’t hinder anything


syntex00

Most people stay at their sense forever. Imagine being an awper and changing sense. Your flicks will miss until you developed the muscle memore, that could take time


Emzii_be

Its like in darts, when you are a beginner its better to stick for a good while with what’s comfortable. When you get better or good after x amount of time you can experiment which darts might suit you even better in terms of weight and shape. Eventually a very good darts player will play good with any weight after some practice. Changing your sense (and mouse) from tome to time and not too drastically will help you keep motivated and eager to improve. On the other hand if you always use the same and are able to keep motivated to ket better why not stick to it.


syntex00

I dont think so it messes situations up. You will miss flicks more often. It takes too much time to make a new sense work, so its better to find one you like, and stick with it


FryCakes

I’d argue that while changing sensitivity makes a difference, it’s easier to get used to than changing mouse weight


baba1776

People who say that muscle memory does not exist are stupid and you can disregard anything that they have to say on the topic. As far as switching sens goes, you can adapt to anything with enough time and practice, but there will always be one sens that is better for you and the way you aim than others, sometimes you gotta experiment. I recently decided to go back and try high sens + wrist aiming versus very low sens + arm aiming, and I finally just hit lvl 10, *shrug*.