What it is
ValorantCC (valorantcc.com) is a simple website dedicated to hosting Valorant crosshair codes. Free, no login, light ads. Active since 2021. The pitch is minimalist: a searchable grid of crosshairs (from pros, streamers, community) with a "copy code" button that leaves it ready to paste in-game.
Leverages Valorant's feature that allows exporting/importing crosshairs as text code. Any user can generate their code and paste it into another client.
What problem it solves
Finding the perfect crosshair requires experimenting — outline thickness, gap, color, dot, dynamic vs static. Adjusting manually takes hours. The natural move is to try a pro's you admire and see if it feels comfortable.
ValorantCC consolidates those crosshairs. Search "TenZ" or "Tarik" or "yay", get their current crosshair code, click copy, paste in-game (Settings > Crosshair > Import Profile Code). Five seconds.
How it differs
Versus prosettings.net, ValorantCC is specialized in crosshairs only. Prosettings has crosshairs BUT also sensitivity, mouse settings, video settings, peripherals — broader.
If your only interest is trying pro crosshairs, ValorantCC is faster (specific UI, direct copy-paste). If you want a pro's full config (sens, video, etc.), prosettings.
Versus r/ValorantCustomCrosshairs, ValorantCC has better curation and search. Reddit has more volume but requires more digging.
What people use it for
Trying a favorite pro's crosshair: search → copy code → paste in-game. Done.
Browse by style: filters by color, dot/no-dot, outline. Useful when exploring what feels comfortable.
Inspiration for custom design: see what setups similar pros use to start your own design.
Share your own: if you get hooked, you can submit yours to the database.
Fast setup on new client: if you reinstall Valorant or play on another PC, recover your crosshair via code instead of reconfiguring manually.
Who it's not for
If you already have a comfortable crosshair, no reason to visit — adds unnecessary friction.
If you want a pro's full config (sens, video, peripherals), prosettings.net is better.
If you play on console, crosshairs are more limited (Valorant Console allows fewer customs). You probably don't need an external site.
How to use it in practice
- Go to
valorantcc.com. No login. - Search a name (pro, streamer, agent that interests you) or browse the grid.
- When you find a crosshair you like, click "Copy Code".
- Open Valorant. Settings → Crosshair → Profiles → Import Profile Code → paste.
- The crosshair appears. If you don't like it, repeat the flow.
Honest limitations
Requires keeping up-to-date. Pros change crosshairs frequently. ValorantCC depends on submissions or a curator to reflect changes.
Submission quality varies. Most are legit but there are "fake-pro" codes uploaded by users.
Doesn't replace personal experimentation. What works for TenZ won't necessarily work for you. ValorantCC gives starting points, not final solutions.
No extra features. Single-purpose by design. If you expect features like "compare two crosshairs side-by-side", it doesn't have them.
English only. No localization (though since it's just browse + copy, the language barrier is minimal).
How to get started
Go to valorantcc.com. Search your favorite pro/streamer or one with a similar style to yours (Aspas if you play aggressive Duelist, FNS if you play Smokes). Copy code, paste in-game. Try a couple matches. If not convinced, repeat. In 30 minutes you can try 10 top-pro crosshairs and see which feels comfortable.