Covers OB54 patch · Tested on 2GB to 8GB RAM Android devices
Here is something most Free Fire guides do not tell you: sensitivity is a hardware problem, not a skill problem.
When a top-ranked player on YouTube shows their settings — General 100, Red Dot 95 — those numbers work on their phone. They are probably using a Poco X5 Pro, a Samsung Galaxy A54, or a Redmi K-series with 8GB RAM, a 90Hz screen, and a fresh oleophobic coating on the display. Their touch sampling rate is around 240Hz. Their phone does not lag between frames.
If you copy those same numbers onto a 3GB RAM Tecno or a 4GB Infinix, the results will be completely different. The touch response is slower. The screen coating is thinner. The processor throttles under load. What feels like a smooth drag on their phone will feel like a wristy, uncontrollable flick on yours.
This is the single biggest reason players struggle with headshots even after trying every “pro setting” they find online. The number is not wrong — the phone mismatch is.
Our generator fixes this by calculating your values from your hardware inputs, not from a fixed table.
Free Fire has eight sensitivity values you can change. Understanding what each one controls helps you fine-tune after using the generator.
General Sensitivity This controls how fast your camera rotates when you swipe the screen without firing. It affects your 360-degree turn speed, wall placement speed, and free movement. For drag headshots, this is the most important value because it determines how quickly your crosshair moves upward from chest to head.
Higher general sensitivity = faster drag, but harder to control in long fights. Lower = more stable, but you will miss fast-moving targets at close range.
Red Dot Sensitivity This controls your aim speed when you are firing without a scope attached. If you play close-range with shotguns, SMGs, or hipfire AR, this value dominates your gunfights. Most drag headshot players set this 5–8 points higher than their general sensitivity.
2x Scope Sensitivity Used in mid-range fights, especially with ARs and SMGs during zone rotations. Setting this too high causes your crosshair to skip over heads. Setting it too low makes you react slowly to moving targets.
4x Scope Sensitivity This is for longer-range AR fights and burst-fire sniping. Most players keep this 15–20 points below their red dot value.
Sniper Scope (8x) Sensitivity Used with AWM, Kar98k, and M82B. Keep this low — between 20 and 40. Sniping requires stability over speed, so high values here cause constant overshoot on distant targets.
Free Look Sensitivity Controls camera movement when you use the free-look button to scan your surroundings. Does not affect aim directly, but a too-fast free look makes it hard to identify threats. Keep this at 70–80 percent of your general value.
Gyroscope Sensitivity This only matters if you have gyroscope enabled. Gyroscope lets you tilt your phone to aim instead of swiping. Drag headshot players who use gyroscope can get faster vertical movement by tilting upward while dragging, which is why some top-ranked players run gyro-on. Our generator tells you whether gyroscope suits your device and play style.
These ranges give you a starting zone. The generator calculates your specific values within these ranges based on your play style, screen size, and finger setup.
| RAM | General | Red Dot | 2x Scope | 4x Scope | Sniper |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2GB | 85–95 | 88–96 | 72–80 | 58–66 | 32–40 |
| 3GB | 78–88 | 82–90 | 68–76 | 54–62 | 28–36 |
| 4GB | 72–82 | 76–85 | 62–70 | 48–56 | 25–33 |
| 6GB | 65–76 | 70–80 | 56–65 | 42–50 | 22–30 |
| 8GB+ | 58–70 | 64–75 | 50–60 | 38–46 | 18–26 |
Why lower RAM = higher sensitivity? Low-RAM phones have touch lag. The game registers your swipe a few milliseconds late. Higher sensitivity values compensate for this lag by making each pixel of movement produce more camera rotation. If your phone has 8GB RAM and a fast processor, you do not need high sensitivity to get quick responses — your hardware is already fast.
Drag headshot is the most popular technique in Indian Free Fire lobbies. You place your crosshair at chest level, then drag the fire button upward while simultaneously pushing the joystick forward to engage the enemy. Done correctly, the momentum of the drag pulls your crosshair to head level at the exact moment your shot registers.
For this to work reliably, your sensitivity setup must meet three conditions:
The generator accounts for your thumb size (from the slider) and adjusts the General and Red Dot values accordingly. Smaller thumbs can use higher sensitivity because their contact area is narrower and produces more precise movement. Larger thumbs benefit from slightly lower values for the same reason.
Redmi / Xiaomi phones Redmi Note series runs MIUI, which has aggressive background process killing. Before every session, clear RAM from the built-in cleaner. Sensitivity-wise, Redmi phones respond well to mid-high values. Redmi Note 12 (4GB): start with General 76, Red Dot 82. Redmi Note 13 (6GB): General 68, Red Dot 74.
Samsung Galaxy A-series Samsung phones tend to have more accurate touch response than average due to their screen quality. This means you can afford to go 5–8 points lower than the table above and still get the same movement speed. Galaxy A14 (4GB): General 70, Red Dot 76. Galaxy A34 (8GB): General 60, Red Dot 68.
Vivo / iQOO phones Vivo Y-series (budget): These phones have slower touch sampling. Go 5 points above the table values. Vivo Y16 (4GB): General 80, Red Dot 86. iQOO series (gaming-focused): These have fast touch rates, use values 5–8 points below the table.
Realme / OPPO phones Realme C-series struggles with RAM management in BGMI-style games. Free Fire runs better but expect frame drops near zone. Use medium-high sensitivity: Realme C55 (6GB): General 70, Red Dot 76.
Tecno / Infinix phones Budget segment with slower processors. These need the highest sensitivity values to compensate for touch delay. Infinix Hot 30 (4GB): General 85, Red Dot 90.
Gyroscope divides the Free Fire community. Here is an honest breakdown.
Use gyroscope if:
Do not use gyroscope if:
Gyroscope sensitivity for drag players typically runs 10–20 points above their general sensitivity. The idea is that the tilt motion adds a second layer of upward drag on top of your finger movement, making headshots reach the target faster.
If the generator recommends gyroscope for your profile, try it in Training Grounds for 15 minutes before judging it.
Free Fire expanded the in-game sensitivity range from 0–100 to 0–200 in a patch update. This doubled the available granularity — you can now fine-tune your settings with much more precision.
If you previously used settings from an old guide that topped out at 100, multiply your old values by 1.5 to get a starting point on the new scale. So if you ran General 60 on the old scale, try General 90 on the new scale as your starting point.
Our generator already outputs values on the 0–200 scale. If your in-game settings only go up to 100, you are on an older version of the game — update through the Play Store and the full range will unlock.
Once you have your generated values:
The most common mistake is adjusting three values at once and losing track of what actually helped. Change one, test properly, then move to the next.
(यह section Indian players के लिए है जो Hindi में guidance चाहते हैं)
Free Fire में headshot मारने के लिए सही sensitivity होना बहुत जरूरी है। बहुत से players YouTube से settings copy करते हैं, लेकिन यह गलत approach है। हर phone अलग होता है, इसलिए settings भी अलग होनी चाहिए।
Sensitivity किस चीज को control करती है?
जब आप screen पर swipe करते हैं, sensitivity decide करती है कि camera कितना fast move करेगा। अगर sensitivity बहुत high है, तो aim बहुत fast move करेगी और headshot miss होगा। अगर बहुत low है, तो आप enemy को track नहीं कर पाएंगे।
General Sensitivity क्या होती है?
यह सबसे important setting है। यही drag headshot के लिए जिम्मेदार है। इसे अपने RAM के हिसाब से set करें। 4GB RAM के लिए 72–82 के बीच रखें।
Red Dot Sensitivity:
यह close range fights में काम आती है। General से 5–8 points ज्यादा रखें। अगर आप drag headshot करते हैं, तो यह setting सबसे ज्यादा matter करती है।
Scope Sensitivity:
2x के लिए General से 15–20 कम रखें। 4x के लिए और 15 कम। Sniper के लिए बहुत low रखें — 25–35 के बीच।
Gyroscope use करें या नहीं?
अगर आपका phone smooth चलता है (6GB+ RAM, lag नहीं होता), तो gyroscope ON करें। यह drag headshot में बहुत help करता है। Budget phone है तो OFF रखें।
Important Tips:
ऊपर दिया गया generator use करें — यह automatically आपके phone के हिसाब से best sensitivity calculate कर देता है।
Q: What is the best sensitivity for Free Fire one-tap headshot in 2026? There is no single “best” setting because the right values depend on your phone. For most 4GB RAM Android phones, a solid starting point is General 78, Red Dot 84. For 6GB RAM phones, try General 70, Red Dot 76. Use the generator above to get values calculated specifically for your device and play style.
Q: Does the 0–200 scale change how sensitivity feels? Yes. The expanded range gives you finer control. Values that were “max” at 100 now sit at 50% of the possible range. Most players find their ideal settings somewhere between 60–120 on the new scale, which was previously impossible to express precisely.
Q: I tried pro player settings and my aim got worse. Why? Because their settings are calibrated for their hardware. A setting of 95 on a 120Hz flagship phone produces a different physical speed than 95 on a 60Hz budget phone. The number is the same but the real-world result is completely different.
Q: How often should I change my sensitivity? Once you find settings that feel right, do not change them unless Free Fire releases a major patch that changes touch response. Constantly adjusting sensitivity resets your muscle memory and makes your aim inconsistent.
Q: Can I use this generator for Free Fire MAX? Yes. Free Fire and Free Fire MAX use identical sensitivity systems. All values from the generator apply to both versions of the game.
Q: What is gyroscope sensitivity and should I enable it? Gyroscope lets you tilt your phone to control camera movement. It is useful for drag headshots but requires practice and a smooth device. Our generator tells you whether gyroscope is recommended based on your inputs. If it says OFF, follow that recommendation until you are comfortable with the basic settings first.
Q: Is this tool safe? Will using these settings get me banned? Yes, completely safe. This is a calculator — it gives you numbers to manually enter in the game’s official settings menu. It does not modify any game files or interact with the game in any way. There is zero ban risk.
The generator uses five inputs to produce your eight output values:
RAM and performance tier determine your base value. Lower RAM devices receive higher base sensitivity to compensate for touch latency. Smooth devices with higher RAM receive lower base values because their hardware already responds quickly to light touches.
Screen size adjusts the base up or down by 3–4 points. Smaller screens have a smaller swipe area, so finger movement naturally produces more camera rotation per centimetre. Larger screens need slightly higher values for the same reason.
Play style shifts the Red Dot and General relationship. Drag players get a wider Red Dot–General gap. Scope players get tighter, more conservative values. Rush players get higher values across the board for fast close-range reactions.
Finger count adds a progressive bonus for more fingers. Two-finger players need simpler, more forgiving values. Four-finger and claw players benefit from higher values because their individual finger movements are smaller and more precise.
Thumb size and reaction speed from the sliders fine-tune the General value by ±9 points. These are the most personal inputs and reflect your individual grip style.