Page MenuHomeFeedback Tracker

Mouse sensitivity does not change with scope magnification.
Awaiting internal Testing, NormalPublic

Description

Take an M21 and mount a scope and zoom in 9X and you'll find that the mouse sensitivity is exactly the same as 3X and doesn't decrease as the zoom gets bigger. In previous versions the mouse sensitivity would decrease as the zoom was increased.

Details

Severity
Tweak
Resolution
Open
Reproducibility
Always
Operating System
Windows 11 x64
Category
General

Event Timeline

Ponezun created this task.Dec 26 2024, 11:08 AM
Geez changed the task status from New to Awaiting internal Testing.Jan 6 2025, 2:21 PM
Geez added a subscriber: Geez.Fri, May 9, 10:58 AM

Hello Ponezun.
This should be adjustable with user settings such as Aim sensitivity curve. These are can be set up separately for mouse, gamepad and gyro.
Default is 100% which means linear reduction with magnification.
Is it possible you have set it to zero? As that would disable the input scaling with FOV.

Hello Ponezun.
This should be adjustable with user settings such as Aim sensitivity curve. These are can be set up separately for mouse, gamepad and gyro.
Default is 100% which means linear reduction with magnification.
Is it possible you have set it to zero? As that would disable the input scaling with FOV.

I'm pretty sure it's 100%. In some version of 1.2-1.3 this problem existed. In the current version the aiming sensitivity is correctly reduced with magnification but it's still too high for me, in some mods there are some sights that are fixed and some that change with magnification I don't know if it's a mod problem or yours, shouldn't this setting be mandatory for all sights? I also think that the default sensitivity setting is not enough, shouldn't you separate the sensitivity settings for mechanical and magnification scopes (or PIP scopes for that matter)? Also it should be possible to set the scale of the aimer's magnification change yourself, for me it's too fast sensitivity at high magnification (4x+) and then I'll reduce the sensitivity at high magnification!