Valorant and CS2 do not use the same sensitivity scale, so copying your Valorant sensitivity directly into CS2 will not give the same aim feel.
The better way is to convert through physical mouse distance, usually measured as cm/360.
You need two numbers:
your Valorant sensitivity
your mouse DPI
From there, you can calculate how far your mouse travels for a full 360-degree turn, then find the CS2 sensitivity that produces a similar distance.
That gives you a much better starting point than guessing.
For example, if your Valorant sensitivity feels comfortable because it gives you a certain cm/360, the goal is not to copy the Valorant number. The goal is to recreate the same physical turn distance in CS2.
You can use this converter:
https://sensitivity-converter.utilforge.xyz
Choose Valorant as the source game, enter your sensitivity and DPI, then choose Counter-Strike 2 as the target game.
The result should be treated as a baseline. You may still need to adjust slightly because Valorant and CS2 differ in FOV, movement, recoil, scoped behavior, and general game feel.
The practical workflow:
- Convert your sensitivity.
- Load into practice range or a workshop map.
- Do a few 180 turns, flicks, and tracking movements.
- Adjust by small increments if it feels slightly off.
- Keep the final number consistent for a while before changing it again.
The math gets you close. Your hand still gets the final vote.













