Best Fortnite Settings
Season 3 2026
Aim settings, edit binds, build controls and visual settings for PC, controller and mobile. Updated every season. Answer above the fold.
Last updated: May 2026 · Chapter 6 Season 3 · All platforms
⚡ Instant Answer
The Settings That Matter Most
Controller aim: Linear response curve, 6-8% deadzone, 30-40% look sensitivity, 25-35% aim sensitivity. Aim assist strength: 100% on console, 70-80% on PC with controller.
PC mouse: 400-800 DPI, 6-10% in-game sensitivity. The exact number matters less than finding one you can track with. Lower is generally more precise at range.
Edit sensitivity: 1.5-2.0x your look sensitivity. High edit speed is mechanical — practice it in creative, do not just bump the number.
Visual priority: Turn off motion blur entirely. Set view distance to Epic. Shadows off or low. Performance mode on PC if your frame rate dips below 60.
PC mouse: 400-800 DPI, 6-10% in-game sensitivity. The exact number matters less than finding one you can track with. Lower is generally more precise at range.
Edit sensitivity: 1.5-2.0x your look sensitivity. High edit speed is mechanical — practice it in creative, do not just bump the number.
Visual priority: Turn off motion blur entirely. Set view distance to Epic. Shadows off or low. Performance mode on PC if your frame rate dips below 60.
Season
Chapter 6 S3
Best Mode
Performance
Target FPS
144+
Updated
May 2026
01 — Controller Settings (PS5 and Xbox)
Controller settings matter more in Fortnite than in almost any other shooter because aim assist is a tunable mechanic, not a fixed feature. The right curve and sensitivity lets aim assist track properly. The wrong settings fight it.
| Setting | Recommended Value | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Input Mode | Controller | Never run mouse and keyboard settings on a controller — aim assist only applies in Controller mode. |
| Response Curve | Linear | Exponential curves delay input at low stick deflection. Linear gives predictable 1:1 movement. Pro players almost universally use Linear. |
| Look Sensitivity | 30-40% | High enough to turn quickly in builds, low enough to track at range. Start at 30 and raise by 2% until turning feels natural. |
| Aim Sensitivity | 25-35% | Lower than look sensitivity. When you aim-down-sights you want slower, more precise tracking. A 5-10% gap between look and aim is standard. |
| L2/LT Deadzone | 6-8% | Remove stick drift without killing responsiveness. If your character moves without input, raise by 2% until it stops. |
| R2/RT Deadzone | 6-8% | Same logic. Consistent with left stick for muscle memory. |
| Aim Assist Strength | 100% (console), 75% (PC+controller) | Full strength on console. PC players with controller often find 75-80% feels cleaner against mouse opponents at range. |
| Build Sensitivity Multiplier | 1.5-2.0x | Faster look speed in build mode lets you place and edit without fighting your turn speed. Most players go 1.8x. |
🎮 Aim Assist Tip
Keep aim assist set to Precision type, not Default or Focusing. Precision activates when your crosshair is near a target and gives a stronger tracking pull — it is the most controllable type for players who aim intentionally rather than relying purely on stick drift into assist.Advertisement
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02 — PC Mouse and Keyboard Settings
| Setting | Recommended | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mouse DPI | 400-800 DPI | Lower DPI requires more physical mouse movement which increases precision. Most pro players use 400 DPI. 800 DPI is fine for players with less desk space. |
| In-Game Sensitivity (X/Y) | 6-10% | At 400 DPI, 8% X/Y is a common starting point. Adjust until a full 180 degree turn requires approximately one full arm movement across your mousepad. |
| Targeting Sensitivity | 40-60% | Multiplied against your base sensitivity when ADS. Lower values make long-range shots more precise. 50% is the most common competitive value. |
| Scope Sensitivity | 30-45% | Even lower for scopes. Sniping requires fine adjustments — a slow scope is more accurate than a fast one. |
| Edit Sensitivity | Same as or slightly above look sensitivity | Unlike controller, PC players often match or slightly exceed look sensitivity for edits since keyboard edits do not require stick movement. |
🖥 Performance Mode
If your PC drops below 60fps in late-game or during fights, enable Performance Mode under Video settings. It reduces visual quality significantly but your frame rate — and therefore your input response time — improves dramatically. Playing at 144fps on Performance mode beats 60fps on Epic quality every time in competitive contexts.03 — Visual Settings — What to Turn Off
| Setting | Set To | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Motion Blur | OFF | Obscures enemy positions during movement. No competitive benefit. Always off. |
| Shadows | OFF or Medium | High shadows tank performance and can hide players in dark zones. Off gives cleanest visibility. |
| Anti-Aliasing | TSR or FXAA | TSR is best quality. FXAA if you need the performance. MSAA uses too much GPU for the benefit in this game. |
| View Distance | Epic | The only setting that directly affects whether you can see distant players. Never lower this. |
| Textures | Low or Medium | Textures use VRAM not GPU. If you have 8GB+ VRAM, set to High. Otherwise Low has no competitive disadvantage. |
| 3D Resolution | 100% or Render Scale 1.0 | Never lower below 100% — it blurs the game and makes enemies harder to spot. If performance is poor, lower other settings before touching this. |
| Colour Blind Mode | Deuteranope or Tritanopia | Many non-colour-blind players use these modes because they make enemy outlines and builds more visually distinct. Experiment regardless of your colour vision. |
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