• CS;GO Sensitivity in rust?
    11 replies, posted
I played rust for 600 hours before CS:GO, however I had to drop my sensitivity for CS:GO A lot compared to the high sensitivity I used to play on, now i've got used to my lower sensitivity I want the same sensitivity for rust, is there a type of converter or anything which I can use to do so or can anyone help me get it the same? My sensitivity in CS:GO is 1.65
Why woul'd you faff about sensitivity so much anyway? I have never heard of a "converter" of any sorts sorry.
Because I like to use one sensitivity and get used to it, so I can remember how much I need to turn or flick to quickly accuire my target or switch target whilst being accurate etc etc.
[QUOTE=TheStevieJ;44626802]Because I like to use one sensitivity and get used to it, so I can remember how much I need to turn or flick to quickly accuire my target or switch target whilst being accurate etc etc.[/QUOTE] you wont be able to do that anyways rust and cs:go are two different games and the movement speed is different but back to your OP use the console to set your sensitivity to what you want
Yeah, that's very faffy. Just use the slider to get the approximate sensitivity CS:GO & Rust are different games so having a slightly different sensitivity isn't going to screw you over at all.
I've had 600 hours in Rust, I understand it's mechanics and how it works lol. But when you're constantly moving between the two different games on two different sensitivity's, it will mess up your aim big time. I guess I'll just have to play around with the sensitivity until it feels the same.
[QUOTE=TheStevieJ;44626901]But when you're constantly moving between the two different games on two different sensitivity's, it will mess up your aim big time[/QUOTE] no if doing that then you will learn to compensate and if you have over 600 hours of rust since steam release then you need to take a break
[QUOTE=Unemphatic;44626937]no if doing that then you will learn to compensate and if you have over 600 hours of rust since steam release then you need to take a break[/QUOTE] What do you mean compensate? Switching between two sensitivity's whilst having lengthy gaming sessions will take you a lot longer to get used to, especially when one is really high and one is really low, and really screw with your muscle memory :s P.S - I did take a break, hence the 160 or so hours in cs:go lately ;)
if you had actually used google you would have come up with a result, unfortunately I tried that site and it seemed off. either way if yours is at 1.65 in csgo, it should be about 0.9 in rust. just estimated, dont mark my word. i suggest higher sens in rust anyway tho, regardless of muscle memory. your csgo train wont simply vanish cuz of another gaame with diff sens
Not sure if this is relevant or not, but anyways: [url]www.mouse-sensitivity.com[/url]
its actually down :O but like i said its off as well
CS go has no ADS, in Rust you can have a lower sensitivity in ADS mode then CS and a higher sens for normal mode and get much better results while aiming and in general play. If you want your exact sensitivity for rust when ADS, which I would presume is what you want if you are playing at 400 dpi and 1.65; then work out how much rotation you achieve in a mousepad swipe from one side to the other and then lower the sensitivity until it is similar in Rust. I imagine at that sensitivity you are looking at about 180 degrees of rotation.
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