Comparison

ProSettings.net (Marvel Rivals)vsCrosshair Hub (Marvel Rivals)

Two config resources for Marvel Rivals: ProSettings.net covers sensitivity, eDPI, gear, and what pros run; Crosshair Hub is a focused database of per-hero crosshair codes you copy and import in-game.

Category: Pro SettingsLast verified: June 3, 2026

Verdict

ProSettings.net when you want the full picture: sensitivity, eDPI, DPI, mouse, monitor, and gear of pros and creators in a searchable database. Crosshair Hub when all you want is to import a reticle: a database of per-hero crosshair codes you copy and paste in-game. ProSettings gives you the whole setup and what pros run; Crosshair Hub solves one step, the crosshair, with no detours.

Side-by-side

ProSettings.net (Marvel Rivals)Crosshair Hub (Marvel Rivals)
FreeYesYes
Open sourceNoNo
OfficialNoNo
TypeReferenceReference
PlatformsWebWeb
DifficultyIntermediateBeginner
License
Source
VerifiedJune 3, 2026June 3, 2026

Which to use for what

  • Set up your sensitivity and eDPI from scratchBetter pick: ProSettings.net (Marvel Rivals)

    ProSettings lists pros' sensitivity, DPI, and eDPI so you have a realistic starting point; Crosshair Hub doesn't touch sensitivity.

  • Import a per-hero crosshair in-gameBetter pick: Crosshair Hub (Marvel Rivals)

    Its database of copyable per-hero codes solves exactly that in seconds; ProSettings centers on sensitivity and gear, not reticle codes.

  • Decide which mouse or monitor to buyBetter pick: ProSettings.net (Marvel Rivals)

    Its gear database shows what hardware pros run; Crosshair Hub doesn't cover peripherals.

  • Try several reticles fast until you find yoursBetter pick: Crosshair Hub (Marvel Rivals)

    It's focused only on crosshairs, so you iterate and compare codes without noise; on ProSettings the crosshair is one data point among many.

  • Copy a specific pro's full setupBetter pick: ProSettings.net (Marvel Rivals)

    ProSettings gathers each pro's sensitivity, gear, and config on one page; Crosshair Hub only covers the crosshair part.

Copying pros' configs is a tempting shortcut, but you should know what you're copying. ProSettings.net and Crosshair Hub cover two different parts of that puzzle. ProSettings is the full picture: sensitivity, eDPI, DPI, mouse, monitor, and gear of pros and creators in a searchable database. Crosshair Hub is a single, sharpened piece: per-hero crosshair codes you copy and paste in-game. One gives you the whole setup; the other solves the reticle and nothing else.

Scope: full setup vs one piece

The core difference is how much of the setup each one covers.

  • ProSettings.net is the whole snapshot. For each pro or creator it lists sensitivity, DPI, calculated eDPI, plus the hardware: mouse, monitor, mousepad, keyboard. If you want to rebuild someone's full config or understand what hardware dominates the top of the game, it's all on one page.
  • Crosshair Hub does one thing very well: it gives you per-hero crosshair codes, ready to copy and import in-game in seconds. It doesn't touch sensitivity or gear; its value is speed and reticle focus.

The practical rule: if your question is "how do I set everything up," go to ProSettings. If it's "what crosshair do I use for this hero," go to Crosshair Hub.

Sensitivity and gear vs reticle codes

Each tool shines in its lane.

ProSettings covers what Crosshair Hub doesn't touch: the sensitivity and hardware side. Seeing several pros' eDPI gives you a realistic range to calibrate your own, and its gear database tells you which mouse or monitor the best players run when you're about to buy. It's the resource for the structural setup.

Crosshair Hub covers what on ProSettings is just one more data point: the crosshair as the main event. By focusing only on reticles, iterating is fast —you compare several codes, test them in-game, settle on one— without the noise of a page full of other fields. To dial in the per-hero crosshair, that focus is exactly what you want.

The honest caveat

It needs to be said plainly: copying a pro's config won't instantly make you aim like a pro. Sensitivity, eDPI, and crosshair are a starting point, not a shortcut to mechanics. What works for a pro is calibrated to their thousands of hours, their muscle memory, and their style. Copy a setup as a base, sure, but then adjust it to what feels comfortable and put in the hours: no config replaces practice.

When each one wins

Situation Winner Why
Set up your sensitivity and eDPI from scratch ProSettings.net Lists pros' sensitivity, DPI, and eDPI as a starting point
Import a per-hero crosshair in-game Crosshair Hub Database of copyable per-hero codes, ready in seconds
Decide which mouse or monitor to buy ProSettings.net Gear database with the hardware pros run
Try several reticles fast Crosshair Hub Focused only on crosshairs, you iterate without noise
Copy a specific pro's full setup ProSettings.net Gathers sensitivity, gear, and config on one page

Verdict

ProSettings.net is the resource for the player who wants the full picture: sensitivity, eDPI, gear, and what pros run, all searchable in one place. Crosshair Hub is for the player who only needs a per-hero crosshair and wants to import it with no detours.

They don't compete; they complement. Build your sensitivity and pick your hardware with ProSettings, and dial in the per-hero reticle with Crosshair Hub. But keep expectations grounded: the config gives you a comfortable base, not aim. That one you build yourself, by playing.

ProSettings.net (Marvel Rivals)

Database of sensitivity, eDPI, gear, and settings from pros and creators

View ProSettings.net (Marvel Rivals)
Crosshair Hub (Marvel Rivals)

Database of per-hero crosshair codes to copy and import in-game

View Crosshair Hub (Marvel Rivals)

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