What it is
ProSettings.net (Marvel Rivals) is the Marvel Rivals section of an established esports settings site that also covers CS2, Valorant, Apex, Fortnite, Rainbow Six, and Overwatch. For Marvel Rivals it compiles, in a per-player table, sensitivity (vertical and horizontal), eDPI, DPI, and gear: mouse, monitor, GPU, mousepad, keyboard, headset, and chair. Players are organized by team, country, and creator. It's a community resource, third-party and unofficial: NetEase does not endorse it. Its value lies in gathering in one place the "what they play with" of pros and creators, maintained and updated as new players appear.
What problem it solves
Once you start taking the mechanics seriously, the question becomes what settings and gear the people at the top use. Hunting that down player by player across streams, social media, or interviews is tedious and often there's no data. ProSettings concentrates that information in a searchable table: at a glance you see several pros' sensitivity and eDPI, compare values, and spot common ranges. Marvel Rivals is a third-person shooter, so pure aim matters less than in CS, but sensitivity and eDPI still affect your tracking on hitscan duelists, and starting from a reasonable reference saves you from blind trial and error.
How it's different
Against Crosshair Hub, the difference is one of scope. ProSettings is the broad settings-and-gear database: it tells you what mouse, what sensitivity, and what eDPI pros use, plus monitor and peripherals. Crosshair Hub, by contrast, is narrow and deep on one thing: reticle codes you copy and import in-game. ProSettings mentions crosshairs but it isn't its strength; its core is the full hardware-and-sensitivity picture. If you want to understand the "what they play with and at what sensitivity" of pros, ProSettings covers more; if all you want is a crosshair code ready to import, Crosshair Hub is more direct. They complement each other: one for sens and gear, the other for the reticle.
What people use it for
- Comparing sensitivity and eDPI: seeing what values several pros use and landing on a reasonable range to start calibrating.
- Gear purchase decisions: checking which mouse, monitor, or mousepad predominate among high-level players before investing.
- A starting point for new players: beginning from a known reference rather than a random number.
- Curiosity about your favorite pro: seeing the full setup of a specific player you follow.
- Spotting trends: noticing which hardware or sens ranges recur across the competitive scene.
Who this tool isn't for
If you're specifically after crosshair codes to import, that isn't the core here, that's where Crosshair Hub is the pick. If you expect copying a pro's sensitivity to make you aim like them, this tool works no miracles: settings are personal and depend on your mouse, your DPI, your distance to the monitor, and your comfort. And if you play casually with no interest in optimizing mechanics or gear, much of its value doesn't apply and you don't need to consult it.
How to use it in practice
- Go to prosettings.net/lists/marvel-rivals.
- Scan the table and filter or sort by player, team, or creator depending on what you're after.
- Look at eDPI (DPI multiplied by sensitivity) more than raw sens, because eDPI normalizes across mice with different DPI.
- Note a reasonable eDPI range from several pros, rather than copying a single extreme value.
- Apply that starting value in your game and tune it over hours of practice until it feels comfortable for you.
Honest limitations
- Third-party, unofficial data: NetEase does not endorse the site. Information is gathered from public sources and can have gaps, errors, or go stale.
- Copying settings doesn't grant skill: a pro's sensitivity is a starting point, not a shortcut. Personal comfort, your monitor, and your hours of practice matter more.
- Third person shifts how much aim weighs: in Marvel Rivals pure aim matters less than in a first-person shooter, so sens matters but isn't the decisive factor on every hero.
- Uneven player coverage: the list grows over time; your favorite pro may not be in it yet, or their gear data may be missing.
- Possible ads: like other community sites, it may show advertising to sustain itself.
How to get started
Open prosettings.net/lists/marvel-rivals and look at the eDPI column across several pros to get a feel for the range used in the scene. Pick a value within that range as a starting point, apply it in your game, and give it hours of practice before touching it again. Treat it as a reference for calibration, not a formula to copy and paste.
Alternatives to ProSettings.net (Marvel Rivals)
If ProSettings.net (Marvel Rivals) isn't the right fit, these Marvel Rivals tools cover similar needs.
