Oblivity - Find Your Perfect Sensitivity Review
Veteran players may remember the "PSA Method" (Perfect Sensitivity Approximation) from the Overwatch days. That involved a tedious ruler, a keyboard, and measuring your desk pad.
Oblivity is the PSA Method on steroids. The PSA method was binary (too fast/too slow). Oblivity uses spatial mapping.
It tracks whether you are inaccurate at 10 degrees (micro-adjustments) versus 90 degrees (large flicks). Many players need a sensitivity that is slow for tracking but fast for turning around. Oblivity solves this by recommending a specific Mouse Acceleration curve (RawAccel compatible) or a balanced static sensitivity, depending on your game of choice.
Every FPS player knows the ritual. You miss a shot you should have hit. You sigh, tab out of the game, and slide the mouse sensitivity slider down by 0.2. Or maybe up. You jump into a deathmatch, over-flick, then slide it the other way. You spend more time in the training range than in ranked play. You are chasing the ghost of "perfect aim."
This is the problem Oblivity was built to solve.
For years, finding your perfect sensitivity was a dark art. Pro players would tell you to do a "360-degree turn from one side of your mousepad to the other." Others swore by the "PSA Method" (Perfect Sensitivity Approximation), which involves hours of tedious bot-shooting and binary choices ("Is this too fast or too slow?"). It works, but it feels like doing your taxes. Oblivity - Find your perfect Sensitivity
Oblivity takes that manual, frustrating process and automates it with data science.
The flagship feature is deceptively simple. You input your current game (Valorant, Overwatch 2, Apex Legends, CS2, etc.) and your mouse DPI. Oblivity spits out a number. You plug it in.
The magic happens in the "Trust Fall." Most players try a recommended sensitivity, overshoot once, and revert to their old settings. Oblivity forces you to commit for 15 minutes. And almost invariably, users report the same thing: "I didn't notice the sensitivity. I just hit my shots."
When the sensitivity is truly correct, you don't feel it. The cursor becomes an extension of your intent. There is no conscious thought of "pull down for recoil" or "flick to the left." There is just the target dying.
Before we dive into how Oblivity works, we need to destroy a common myth: that there is a "best" sensitivity. Veteran players may remember the "PSA Method" (Perfect
TenZ uses ~280 eDPI in Valorant. Brax uses ~400. Hiko uses ~576. They are all professional players. They all win.
Why is the range so wide? Because perfect aim isn't about a number; it is about neuromuscular compatibility. The length of your fingers, the way you pronate your wrist, the friction of your mousepad, and your reactive inhibition—all of these create a "Goldilocks zone" unique to you.
You cannot find your perfect sensitivity by guessing. You need a scientific benchmark.
You can practice a bad sensitivity for 1,000 hours and build bad muscle memory. Oblivity doesn’t change your skill—it unlocks the hardware (your hand) to match your software (your brain).
Here is the hard part. When Oblivity gives you a new sensitivity, it will feel wrong. You will hate it for the first 2 hours. This is called the "Aversion Period." Step 3: The “Perfect Zone” Oblivity outputs a
Your brain has myelinated pathways for your old, incorrect sensitivity. You are literally rewiring your motor cortex. Trust the data. Play 3 deathmatch rounds or 30 minutes of the Oblivity tracking playlist at the new setting. Do not change it back.
Step 1: Connect & Calibrate Link your game (Valorant, CS2, Overwatch, Apex, CoD) or upload a replay. Oblivity reads your mouse movement history.
Step 2: The Dynamic Test Take a 5-minute adaptive test. The algorithm adjusts targets in real-time based on your misses and hits.
Step 3: The “Perfect Zone” Oblivity outputs a Sensitivity Range (e.g., 40-48 cm/360) and pinpoints your exact "Golden Number" where your micro-adjustments and target switching peak simultaneously.