Hook: “Is your aim shaky? Do you over-flick or under-aim? The problem might not be you—it might be your sensitivity.”
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. Oblivity - Find your perfect Sensitivity
At its core, Oblivity is an AI-powered aim analyzer. But unlike standard aim trainers (Aim Lab, Kovaak's) that just give you a score, Oblivity focuses on a single, obsessive variable: Your unique sensitivity fingerprint.
Here is how it works:
Before we dive into how Oblivity works, we need to destroy a common myth: that there is a "best" sensitivity. Title: Oblivity: Stop Guessing, Start Finding Your 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 play a short, 60-second calibration test inside
Let me tell you about a tester named "Mike." Mike played Apex Legends for 2,000 hours as a Hardstuck Diamond. He used 800 DPI, 1.5 in-game (1200 eDPI). He thought he needed high sensitivity because he played "Pathfinder" and needed to swing quickly.
Mike ran Oblivity.
Mike refused. He said it felt like "moving through molasses." After two weeks of forcing himself to use the Oblivity recommendation, his horizontal flicks became sticky. He hit Masters within 30 days. He didn't get better aim; he unlocked the aim he already had.
While you play, Oblivity is recording hundreds of data points. It looks at: