Free Fire sensitivity generator
Pick your device RAM and how you like to play. The tool builds a full sensitivity table (General, Red Dot, 2x, 4x, Sniper Scope, Free Look) on the in-game 0-200 scale, plus a suggested DPI range. All values are starting points for OB54.
Your starting point
All values use the in-game 0-200 sliders. Treat them as starting points, updated for OB54: play a few minutes in the training ground, then adjust one slider at a time until it feels right.
How to apply these settings in Free Fire MAX
- Generate your table above and tap Copy settings so the numbers are on your clipboard;
- Open Free Fire MAX and tap the gear icon in the top-right of the lobby;
- Choose the Sensitivity tab in the settings menu;
- Drag each slider to match your numbers: General, Red Dot, 2x Scope, 4x Scope, Sniper Scope and Free Look;
- Back out, enter the training ground, and shoot moving targets for a few minutes before you queue a ranked match.
Every slider in the game runs from 0 to 200, and you do not need to hit the numbers exactly. Being a point or two off makes no difference you could feel. What matters is the relationship between the sliders: a quicker General value for turning and tracking up close, and slower scope values so long-range shots stay controlled.
What DPI is and where to change it
DPI decides how much on-screen movement one swipe of your finger produces. It is not a Free Fire setting; it lives at the phone level. On many Android phones you can reach it through Developer options: open Settings, go to About phone, tap Build number seven times, then look for the Smallest width value inside Developer options. Raising it makes your swipes cover more of the screen, which feels like extra sensitivity stacked on top of the in-game sliders.
Two honest warnings. First, plenty of phones hide or lock this option, and iPhones do not expose anything like it at all. If you cannot find it, skip it; the in-game sliders alone are enough. Second, changing Smallest width resizes everything on your phone, not just the game, so write down the original value before you touch anything. The DPI ranges this tool suggests are approximate community starting points, not exact requirements.
Why the same numbers feel different on every phone
Two phones running identical sliders can feel completely different, which is why copying settings blindly rarely works. Refresh rate is the biggest reason: a 120Hz screen draws twice as many frames per second as a 60Hz one, so the same swipe looks smoother and reads as slightly faster. Touch sampling rate matters too, since it decides how often the screen checks where your finger actually is. Screen size, a thick screen protector, and even dry versus sweaty fingers all change how far a swipe really travels.
That gap is what the RAM selector approximates. Phones with less memory usually drop frames in busy fights, and slightly higher sensitivity helps you keep turning when that happens. Phones with 8GB or more tend to hold a stable frame rate, so they can afford slightly lower, more precise values.
A simple routine for fine-tuning
Load the training ground and pick one dummy. Swipe your crosshair onto its head from about a quarter of the screen away. If you keep sliding past the head, lower General by 5 points. If you stop short and need a second small push, raise it by 5. Repeat until your first swipe lands, then run the same test with the Red Dot slider while firing. Change one slider at a time and give each change a full session before judging it. Ten focused minutes of this beats an hour of copying numbers from videos.
Sensitivity is also only half of your aim on mobile; your character setup carries the other half. Skills that steady movement or speed up your hands change how a given sensitivity feels, so it is worth pairing your new settings with our best character combinations for OB54.
Common questions
Will high sensitivity give me one-tap headshots automatically? No, and anything promising that is lying to you. Sensitivity only changes the trade-off between speed and control: higher values turn faster but overshoot more, lower values track precisely but react slower. One-taps come from crosshair placement and drag timing, and those come from practice, not from a slider.
Do these settings work in Clash Squad? Yes. Sensitivity applies to your whole account, so the same sliders are active in Battle Royale, Clash Squad and Lone Wolf. Because Clash Squad fights happen mostly at close range, some players run a slightly higher General value there; if your CS fights feel sluggish, try the Rush preset above.
Why do my settings feel wrong after an OB update? Big patches sometimes touch aim behavior, recoil or touch response, and even a small change makes familiar numbers feel foreign. The values on this page are tuned as OB54 starting points. After a major update, give yourself one or two training ground sessions before changing anything; often it is your muscle memory readjusting rather than the settings breaking.
Should I copy a famous player's sensitivity instead? Use it as a reference, not a rule. That player is on different hardware, with a different grip, finger count and years of their own muscle memory. Starting from a preset matched to your device and adjusting in small steps gets you to comfortable settings faster than chasing someone else's numbers.
Do I need to sign in or pay anything? No. Everything runs in your browser and nothing you enter leaves your phone. While you are here, grab today's redeem codes, browse the other free tools, or open the guides section for rank-push and headshot practice help.