How do i get used to higher DPI

I currently use 2500 dpi but i wanna use 9000 , is there a good way to practice ?
Or i should just try to go full 9000 until i do it correctly?

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why the fuck would you want DPI higher than 800?

For the lulz

get a mousepad barely bigger than the mouse, that way you will get used to moving the mouse as less as possible

Are You training to become a surgeon?

In a rare case You are asking this seriously: just use it everyday. It's muscle memory at some point. Go to sleep and next day Your hand will partially forget what it was used to.

Small problem, ill tri to put books to limit the movement

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Small problem, ill try to put books to limit the movement

No, just wanted to try

*400

>turn up DPI by a factor of 3.6
>reduce mouse sensitivity by a factor of 3.6
>enjoy your new, more precise movement
What's so difficult about this?

Get a monitor with more pixels so that 9000 dots isn't so far.

2560x1440 27" monitor with 1600 dpi mouse setting is Superior

Problem with this is that most mice actually get less accurate at higher DPIs because of jitter etc

>expanding_brain.jpg

Just do the 3200DPI first.

enjoy your pixel skipping

all pro players play at 600-700 eDPI (dpi x in game sense so 420dpi at 1.5sense is 630 edpi)

playing at over 1000edpi is literally going to make you loose in games.

Maybe in CS but that's still excessively low. There are lots of players with sensitivities in the 15 - 30cm / 360 range even.

no even in overwatch and quake people still play at 600-700

if your trying to convince yourself your 2000+ dpi isn't a fucking retarded choice your wrong

also ninja plays fortnite at 700edpi

s1mple

he plays at 1200 edpi that's not that crazy and he is a exception.

Enjoy me fragging yo ass huw*te boi

>good players plays with 9000+ DPI, so if I play with 9000 DPI I will be pro like them.
You are delusional. Literally gitgut

>>turn up DPI by a factor of 3.6
>>reduce mouse sensitivity by a factor of 3.6

does this do anything whatsoever?
why should we expect the hardware down-conversion from the sensor's native resolution to be any worse than some software doing the exact same thing?

>does this do anything whatsoever?
Yeah. Using a DPI that isn't the sensors native (or half, quarter, etc.) means you will probably get noise and generally worse performance from the sensor.

Wtf skipping at 400?! What relevant mouse has 800 as optimal dpi

Start by using a proper mouse instead of that mouselet

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2000 DPI dual monitor is the best setup.