Converting CS2 0.60 Sensitivity to Fortnite
At 800 DPI with a CS2 sensitivity of 0.60, the equivalent Fortnite sensitivity is 0.425. This conversion uses the multiplier ratio of 0.708 / 1, ensuring that the same physical mouse movement produces identical crosshair rotation in both games. Your CS2 eDPI of 480 translates to 340 eDPI in Fortnite.
Your Sensitivity Profile at 800 DPI
With a CS2 sensitivity of 0.60 at 800 DPI, your effective DPI is 480. This means you need to move your mouse 86.6 centimetres to complete a full 360-degree turn. This is classified as a very low sensitivity setting, which is below the average professional eDPI.
A cm/360 of 86.6 cm is best suited for passive anchoring and long-range precision. At this speed, you need significant physical mouse movement for turns. This provides excellent precision for holding angles and landing headshots at distance. A extra-large mousepad of at least 45 cm width is essential.
Understanding 0.60 Sensitivity at 800 DPI
An eDPI of 480 places you in the lower end of competitive settings. Many AWP specialists and passive players operate in this range, prioritising precision over speed. You will excel at holding tight angles and hitting distant headshots but may struggle with quick 180-degree checks.
How This Compares to Professional Settings
An eDPI of 480 is on the lower side of professional CS2 settings. Players like s1mple and ZywOo have used similar eDPI values. This range demands a large mousepad and rewards patient, precise play.
Applying 0.425 in Fortnite
To use your converted sensitivity, open Fortnite and navigate to the mouse sensitivity settings. Set your sensitivity to 0.425 with your mouse DPI at 800. In Fortnite, navigate to the mouse sensitivity option and enter 0.425. Make sure X and Y axis values match unless you intentionally want different horizontal and vertical speed.
After applying the converted sensitivity, spend at least 10 to 15 minutes in creative mode or the aim course to verify the feel matches your CS2 experience. Focus on both flick shots and smooth tracking to confirm the conversion feels natural.