Guide
Veck.io Best Sensitivity Baseline
There is no universal perfect sensitivity. What you need is a baseline that lets you stop on target, track while moving, and turn far enough without panic corrections. Most players waste more progress by retesting every session than by using a merely decent baseline consistently.
What this guide is for
Use this page when your aim feels different every session, when you keep retesting sensitivity without reaching a stable result, or when you are unsure whether your problem is input tuning or simply inconsistent warmup and route quality.
Start with control, not speed
If your crosshair can land calmly but large turns feel a little slow, you are often still close to a usable baseline. If every correction is a snap, overshoot, or emergency drag, your sensitivity is probably too high. The wrong starting instinct is to chase speed before you can stop cleanly.
Pick one starting baseline and protect it
You do not need the perfect number on day one. You need one baseline that is good enough to test honestly. Once you choose it, stop changing it every time one bad match happens.
- Use the same baseline across multiple sessions.
- Keep FOV, crosshair, and keybind changes small while testing sensitivity.
- Do not combine sensitivity retests with a totally new warmup routine on the same day.
Test three motions instead of one
- Short flick to a nearby angle.
- Medium turn across a doorway or lane.
- Tracking while you strafe or adjust around cover.
A good baseline does not need to feel magical in only one of these. It needs to feel acceptable across all three, because real Veck.io fights mix them together.
Use a short session log
Do not rely on memory alone. After each session, note one sentence for these:
- Could you stop cleanly on the first target?
- Were medium turns late or rushed?
- Did tracking break when you moved around cover?
- Did the baseline feel worse in real matches than in warmup?
This is enough to tell whether the issue is consistent or just emotional recoil from one poor session.
Use a small-step tuning rule
Adjust in small steps and then play real matches. Do not rely only on aim drills or one clean practice session. Real fights expose overreactions, panic turns, and poor stopping control much faster than isolated tests.
If the baseline feels close but imperfect, keep the adjustments narrow. Huge swings usually reset your learning instead of improving it.
What “too high” usually looks like
- You overflick nearby targets and correct twice.
- You lose crosshair discipline when strafing.
- Your spray control gets worse as soon as a target changes direction.
What “too low” usually looks like
- You can line up shots calmly but cannot clear medium turns without lifting or dragging too far.
- You feel fine in drills but late on target during real entry fights.
- Your first target is okay, but your recovery to the second angle is slow.
Keep the baseline long enough to judge it
Use the same sensitivity for at least five to ten sessions before judging it unless it is obviously unusable. Your hands need repetition more than novelty. Many players reset progress by changing multiple input variables on the same day.
When to lower it and when to raise it
Lower the baseline when your first correction is almost always an overcorrection, especially at close-to-medium range. Raise it when your crosshair stays controlled but you are repeatedly late on medium turns and second-angle recovery.
- Lower first if you feel fast but unstable.
- Raise first if you feel calm but consistently late.
- Hold the baseline if your real problem is route quality or panic shooting.
Do not tune sensitivity in isolation
Sensitivity, FOV, crosshair visibility, warmup quality, and route discipline all affect how stable your aim feels. If your route quality is poor, you may blame sensitivity for problems that actually come from bad entries and rushed first shots.
What a good result actually looks like
A good baseline does not feel spectacular every match. It feels repeatable. You can stop on target, recover to the next angle without panic dragging, and keep roughly the same behavior from one session to the next.
If your sensitivity only feels “great” in one short warmup but falls apart in real matches, the test is not finished yet.