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BGMI sensitivity settings and codes: best no-recoil values explained

There is no single magic code that wipes out recoil in BGMI, but the right camera, ADS and gyroscope values get you close. Here are sensible no-recoil starting points, plus how to import a sensitivity code the proper way.

Jun 30, 2026

BGMI sensitivity settings and codes: best no-recoil values explained

Ask any BGMI player what the “best” sensitivity is and you will get ten different answers, because the honest one is that it depends on your phone, your frame rate and how many fingers you play with. What does not change is the framework: a steady camera value, low scope sensitivity for tight sprays, and a gyroscope number that tracks recoil without making your crosshair jitter. Get those three right and your guns stop climbing on their own.

What is a BGMI sensitivity code?

A sensitivity code is a 19-digit string that stores a complete sensitivity profile. Instead of dragging a dozen sliders by hand, you paste the code and the game loads someone else’s camera, ADS and gyroscope values in one go. It is the fastest way to test a setup a creator or a teammate is using.

There is a catch most guides skip over. These codes are time-limited and tied to the uploader’s cloud profile. A code stops working soon after it is reshared, which is why you so often see the message “this shared code is invalid or has expired.” That is also why pasting a random code you found online rarely behaves the way the screenshot promised. The reliable approach is to learn the actual values and dial them in yourself, which is what the tables below are for.

How to copy and import a sensitivity code

If you do want to import a working code from a friend, the steps are quick:

  1. Open BGMI and go to Settings from the main menu.
  2. Open the Sensitivity tab.
  3. Tap Layout Management, then choose the Search Method option.
  4. Enter the 19-digit code and preview the values before you confirm.
  5. Apply it, then head straight to the Training Ground to test, not into a ranked lobby.

To share your own setup, go to Sensitivity, open Cloud Management and tap Upload to Cloud to save your settings. Then open Layout Management, tap Share and copy the code that appears. Remember that because the code is linked to your cloud profile, anything you change later can change for the person who imported it too.

Best BGMI camera sensitivity settings

Camera sensitivity controls how fast your view moves when you are not aiming down sights. Set it too high and close fights feel slippery; too low and you cannot turn fast enough to answer a flank. These are sensible starting points to tune from, not gospel numbers.

Camera type Suggested value
Camera (free look) 95-110%
Camera, TPP no scope 130-150%
Camera, FPP no scope 110-130%
Red dot, holo, 2x camera 55-70%
3x, 4x, 6x camera 30-45%

If you are a hipfire-heavy player who loves close-quarters fights, push the no-scope camera values toward the top of each range. More methodical, ranged players are usually happier at the lower end.

Best ADS sensitivity for spray control

ADS sensitivity is the one most beginners get wrong. Lower numbers here are your friend, because a low ADS value lets you pull your finger down smoothly to counter recoil instead of overcorrecting. This is the single biggest lever on whether a gun feels controllable.

Scope Suggested ADS value
Red dot, holo, 2x 55-70%
3x 25-35%
4x 22-30%
6x 16-22%
8x 10-14%

If your sprays drift upward at range, your ADS values are too high. Drop the 3x and 4x numbers a few points at a time until the recoil pull feels like a small, controlled drag rather than a fight against the screen.

Best gyroscope sensitivity for no recoil

Gyro is where the real recoil control lives, and it is why the best players in India run it. Tilting the device to compensate for recoil is far more precise than dragging with a thumb. Most pros use the ADS Gyroscope sensitivity values, which apply when you aim down sights, so your tilt is spent on controlling the spray rather than on general camera movement.

Gyroscope (ADS) Suggested value
TPP no scope 300-400%
Red dot, holo, 2x 300%
3x 200-240%
4x 180-200%
6x 60-100%
8x 40-90%

Non-gyro players carry all of that recoil control in their ADS values instead, so they lean on the higher end of the ADS table and accept that long-range sprays will always be a little harder. If you are serious about climbing the ranks, learning gyro is the upgrade with the biggest ceiling.

Does your finger layout change the sensitivity you need?

It does, and this is the part copied codes ignore completely. A two-finger player aims and fires with the same thumbs that move the camera, so they usually want slightly higher camera values to turn quickly and lean hard on low ADS to keep sprays in check. A three or four-finger player has dedicated fire and aim buttons, which frees them to run a calmer camera and tighter scope values because their thumbs are not doing three jobs at once.

Gyro changes the maths again. Once the device tilt is carrying your recoil control, you can afford to keep ADS values a notch lower than a non-gyro player would, because the gyroscope is doing the heavy lifting on the spray. The takeaway is simple: decide how you hold the phone first, then tune the values around that, rather than the other way round.

Is there really a “no recoil” sensitivity?

No, and any code that promises to delete recoil entirely is selling you something that does not exist. Sensitivity does not reduce a weapon’s recoil. What good values do is make the recoil predictable and easy to counter, so a long M416 spray lands on a chest instead of climbing into the sky. The phrase “no recoil” is shorthand for “easy to control,” not a cheat. Genuine no-recoil hacks are bannable, and they are not what these settings are.

The current update cycle matters here too. BGMI updates can shift how weapon handling and device performance feel over time, so a profile that felt perfect a few months ago may need a small touch-up now. Treat any saved code as a baseline, not a finished product.

How to tune your own sensitivity the right way

The players who aim best almost never run a copied code untouched. They start from values like the ones above and then fine-tune. The method is simple. Pick an AKM or M416 in the Training Ground, hold a full spray on a wall from medium range, and watch where the bullets go. If they climb, your ADS and gyro values are too low to pull them down, so nudge them up. If the crosshair shakes or overshoots, they are too high, so bring them back down.

Change one value at a time and give it a few magazines before you judge it. Never test new settings in a ranked match, because a real fight is the worst place to learn whether a number feels right. Spend twenty minutes on the range and you will get more from it than from any code you paste in.

A last word on devices: frame rate changes how sensitivity feels. A phone running 90 or 120 FPS will feel snappier at the same numbers than one locked to 60, so if you upgrade your settings after a device or refresh-rate change, expect to retune. There is no universal best code, only the best one for your hands and your screen.

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