How To Change Mouse Sensitivity in STAR WARS Jedi: Fallen Order

Alexis Ongsansoy
2 Min Read

Have you ever experienced being an actual Stormtrooper in the heat of battle but constantly failing to hit anything at all? Well, that’s either you’re really good at roleplaying or you have shaky hands, contact a doctor and get that checked. If either of those accusations doesn’t apply to you then there’s a good chance that you haven’t fiddled around with all of your game’s features yet. You’d be surprised how devs still get this simple setting wrong even today, so let’s fix that and make sure you actually hit something the next time you start swinging your light stick.

STAR WARS Jedi: Fallen Order | How To Change Mouse Sensitivity

Obviously, if we’re talking about your mouse or controller sensitivity, the first place you’re going to look at would be your settings. Okay, the devs got that right.

Surprisingly enough they didn’t have to make you manually adjust your DPI settings on your OS, so that’s a step in the right direction so far.

Hit ‘Start’ or the ‘ESC’ key (lightly) and head on over to your settings tab, the first thing you should see here is the Controls section which it’s showing you, well the controls!

You’d think that the mouse sensitivity can be found when you select ‘Edit Controls’ but not it’s not in there.

If you look right underneath that you’ll see a few more settings that you can access by simply scrolling up or down, that’s it. It’s not even made obvious to you, the developers probably just assumed that its players have enough gaming experience to figure things out on their own.

That’s about it, both settings can be found under ‘Controls’ so if there are any other adjustments you weren’t able to make earlier then head on over there, and tell your friends that you actually knew about this without looking it up online to sound smart!

ALSO READ: NieR:Automata – Controller Support Details PC

Here we have Alexis, he's been gaming ever since the second Famicom came out. Which is probably the reason why he goes back to platformers every now and then. Somewhere down the line he started getting more and more fascinated about looking at maps change colors for three to eight hours straight. If he's not out strategizing and beating the life out of his space bar in that order there's a good chance you can find him playing an FPS or talking someone's ear out about how game balance gets in the way of realism. You can tell that he really likes getting the full experience of whatever he gets his hands on.
Leave a Comment