Sensitivity
KB-backed aim training guides related to sensitivity, generated from AimMod's coaching knowledge.
9 related guides
Best pages for sensitivity
Control tracking sensitivity starting range
For control tracking, a good starting range is about 35-45 cm/360, with slower bias for steadier readable corrections and slightly faster bias if width changes feel too heavy.
Experiment in training, not right after dying
Sensitivity changes can be useful during deliberate practice, but changing it reactively during matches usually steals attention from the game and hides the real weakness.
Mouse control matters more than memorized distance
Changing sensitivity or peripherals does not erase aim skill. Strong aim comes from adaptable hand-eye coordination and fine motor control, not preserving one exact force-distance memory forever.
Reactive tracking sensitivity starting range
For reactive tracking, a good starting range is about 28-35 cm/360 because the category often benefits from faster answer speed while still demanding controlled finishes.
Use suboptimal sensitivities to expose weak mechanics in training
A deliberately suboptimal sensitivity can make hidden movement weaknesses more visible, helping isolate arm speed, wrist fine control, or fingertip precision during training.
Choose sensitivity for the game's movement demands
Sensitivity should be chosen around the movement and aiming demands of the game or role. Faster, wider-angle games often reward faster settings than angle-holding tac shooters.
Everything currently filed under sensitivity
Control tracking sensitivity starting range
For control tracking, a good starting range is about 35-45 cm/360, with slower bias for steadier readable corrections and slightly faster bias if width changes feel too heavy.
Experiment in training, not right after dying
Sensitivity changes can be useful during deliberate practice, but changing it reactively during matches usually steals attention from the game and hides the real weakness.
Mouse control matters more than memorized distance
Changing sensitivity or peripherals does not erase aim skill. Strong aim comes from adaptable hand-eye coordination and fine motor control, not preserving one exact force-distance memory forever.
Reactive tracking sensitivity starting range
For reactive tracking, a good starting range is about 28-35 cm/360 because the category often benefits from faster answer speed while still demanding controlled finishes.
Use suboptimal sensitivities to expose weak mechanics in training
A deliberately suboptimal sensitivity can make hidden movement weaknesses more visible, helping isolate arm speed, wrist fine control, or fingertip precision during training.
Choose sensitivity for the game's movement demands
Sensitivity should be chosen around the movement and aiming demands of the game or role. Faster, wider-angle games often reward faster settings than angle-holding tac shooters.
Dynamic clicking sensitivity starting range
For dynamic clicking, a practical starting range is about 30-45 cm/360 so you can balance anticipatory placement with quick path corrections.
Static clicking sensitivity starting range
For static clicking, a practical starting range is about 35-55 cm/360, usually leaning slower when tiny-target landing stability is the main goal.
Target switching sensitivity starting range
For target switching, a practical starting range is about 28-40 cm/360 because the task needs fast entries but still punishes unstable finishes and excess cleanup.