Choose a title
Pick Valorant or CS2 to load the correct sensitivity semantics.
Advertisement · 728×90
pro-settings-top-banner
Wang Jing Jie · Paper Rex · Singapore
Jinggg is Paper Rex's electric entry-fragger — one of the lowest eDPI players in all of pro Valorant. His ultra-low sensitivity demands exceptional arm aim and consistent muscle memory, yet produces some of the most spectacular plays on the VCT international stage.
eDPI
160
DPI × Sensitivity
DPI
800
Sensitivity
0.2
Valorant in-game
Refresh Rate
360 Hz
cm/360°
56.4
Physical wrist movement
Advertisement · 300×250
pro-settings-mid-rectangle
Mouse
Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2
800 DPI
Monitor
ASUS ROG Swift Pro PG248QP
360 Hz · 1920×1080
0;P;c;7;h;0;0l;3;0o;0;0a;1;0f;0;1b;0Paste in Valorant → Settings → Crosshair → Import Profile Code.
Convert sens 0.2 (Valorant) to Valorant, CS2, Apex, Overwatch 2 and more — instantly.
Advertisement · 728×90
pro-settings-before-similar
What sensitivity does Jinggg use?
Jinggg plays Valorant at 0.2 in-game sensitivity with 800 DPI, giving an eDPI of 160. In physical terms, this is 56.4 cm per 360° rotation.
What is Jinggg's eDPI?
Jinggg's eDPI (Effective DPI) is 160, calculated as 800 DPI × 0.2 in-game sensitivity. eDPI lets you compare sensitivities across players regardless of DPI setting.
What mouse does Jinggg use?
Jinggg uses the Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2. They play at 800 DPI.
What monitor does Jinggg use?
Jinggg uses the ASUS ROG Swift Pro PG248QP running at 360 Hz with a 1920×1080 resolution.
How do I copy Jinggg's crosshair in Valorant?
Copy the code above and paste it in Valorant → Settings → Crosshair → Import Profile Code.
Pro Tip
Filter by game first—Valorant sensitivity does not translate 1:1 to CS2 without cm/360° conversion.
Pick Valorant or CS2 to load the correct sensitivity semantics.
Compare eDPI, resolution, and peripheral choices side by side.
Test adjustments in aim trainers before ranked sessions.
Pro Player Settings Database is structured so you can move from inputs to defensible outputs without hunting for hidden options. Step 1 (“Choose a title”): Pick Valorant or CS2 to load the correct sensitivity semantics. Step 2 (“Browse pros”): Compare eDPI, resolution, and peripheral choices side by side. Step 3 (“Copy responsibly”): Test adjustments in aim trainers before ranked sessions. Following that sequence reduces rounding drift: you lock the scenario first, then layer refinements (tax mode, compounding frequency, activity tier, or niche multiplier) only after baseline numbers look sensible. When you revisit a calculation weeks later, the same order of operations makes spreadsheets and screenshots easier to reconcile with what the UI showed.
Muscle memory rewards narrow eDPI windows; drastic changes destroy flick consistency until retrained.
Hardware parity matters: identical settings on different mice or pads still feel different due to sensor LOD and glide speed.
Revisit Pro Player Settings Database whenever baseline assumptions shift—rates, calendars, population denominators, or hardware targets. The numbers you export today become the audit trail that makes tomorrow’s decision defensible to teammates, clients, or regulators reviewing your methodology.
Competitive FPS performance is a stack of human factors, display timing, and settings you can actually sustain across thousands of repetitions. Crosshair codes encode color, thickness, outlines, and center dot behavior; what reads cleanly on Mirage may wash out on Icebox or Nuke. Sensitivity math reduces to a measurable cm/360°, yet muscle memory still prefers whatever you have rehearsed for seasons. Frame-time and monitor latency tools help you reason about end-to-end click-to-photon delay, but real-world variance from fullscreen optimizations, Reflex, and driver settings will diverge slightly from any single formula. Treat pro settings as structured experiments: change one variable at a time, log outcomes in aim trainers or scrims, and revert when something feels worse under pressure.
Seasoned users pair the in-app insight—“Filter by game first—Valorant sensitivity does not translate 1:1 to CS2 without cm/360° conversion.”—with external checks specific to their industry. For Pro Player Settings Database, treat that guidance as a hypothesis: note the assumption, measure the delta against real-world data you trust, and update defaults when your own history disagrees with generic benchmarks. Documenting those adjustments is what turns a quick answer into a repeatable workflow your team can audit.
Three adjacent tools from the same workflow—open in a new tab mentally, same privacy model here.
We aggregate public interviews and streams; always confirm on live broadcasts because pros experiment often.
Use feedback channels; roster updates depend on public source availability.
It changes visual target size; some players compensate with ADS multipliers—convert using cm/360°, not arbitrary feel.