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Free Fire Sensitivity Settings for Redmi Phones 2026 – Best Setup for Headshots

If you play Free Fire on a Redmi phone and your aim feels off — you are not alone.

Redmi phones have a specific screen refresh rate, touch response, and GPU performance that makes the default sensitivity settings feel wrong. Your crosshair moves too fast, headshots feel inconsistent, and enemies seem to dodge every bullet.

The good news? A few simple sensitivity changes will fix all of this.

This guide gives you the exact sensitivity settings for every popular Redmi model — whether you have a Redmi 9, Redmi 12, Redmi Note 12, or a Redmi Note 13 Pro. Copy the settings, apply them, and notice the difference in your very next match.

Why Redmi Phones Need Different Sensitivity Settings

Every phone has a different screen size, touch sampling rate, and processor speed. Redmi phones, especially the budget and mid-range models, have these specific characteristics:

  • Touch sampling rate of 120Hz–180Hz on most models (higher end = faster touch response)
  • IPS LCD or AMOLED screens with slightly different touch sensitivity compared to iPhones or OnePlus
  • Snapdragon or MediaTek chips that handle gyroscope data differently
  • 60Hz to 120Hz refresh rate depending on model — this directly affects how smooth your aim feels

Because of all this, the sensitivity settings that work perfectly on a Samsung or iPhone will feel completely wrong on a Redmi. You need settings built specifically for your phone.

Before You Apply Sensitivity Settings — Check These First

Before copying any sensitivity values, make sure your in-game graphics and other settings are correct. Sensitivity alone cannot fix a laggy game.

Step 1: Set Graphics Correctly

Go to Settings → Graphics in Free Fire and set:

Model Type Graphics Frame Rate
Redmi 9 / 9A / 9C Low or Medium 60 FPS
Redmi 10 / 10C Medium 60 FPS
Redmi Note 11 / 12 Balanced 60 FPS
Redmi Note 12 Pro / 13 High 90 FPS
Redmi Note 13 Pro+ / Redmi 12 5G High or Ultra 90 FPS

Step 2: Turn OFF these settings

  • Auto Adjust Graphics: OFF
  • GPU Optimisation: check this does not drop FPS mid-game

Step 3: Close background apps before every match — Redmi phones with MIUI/HyperOS run many background processes that cause lag and make your sensitivity feel inconsistent.


Best Free Fire Sensitivity Settings for Redmi (Universal)

These settings work well on most Redmi phones from Redmi 9 to Redmi Note 13 series. Start here, then fine-tune using the model-specific settings below.

Go to: Settings → Sensitivity

Setting Recommended Value
General 95
Red Dot 85
2x Scope 75
4x Scope 65
AWM Scope 50
Free Look 90

💡 Free Fire Nation Tip: These are starting values. Use our Free Fire Sensitivity Calculator on freefirenation.com to get settings personalised for your exact Redmi model and playstyle.

Sensitivity Settings by Redmi Model

Redmi 9 / 9A / 9C Sensitivity Settings

These are entry-level phones with a 60Hz screen. Keep sensitivity slightly lower for more control.

Setting Value
General 90
Red Dot 80
2x Scope 72
4x Scope 60
AWM Scope 45
Free Look 85

Why lower? The 60Hz screen and slower processor mean your game already responds slightly slower. Higher sensitivity makes aim too jumpy on these models.

Redmi 10 / 10C / 10 5G Sensitivity Settings

Mid-range performance. These phones handle Free Fire smoothly at 60FPS.

Setting Value
General 92
Red Dot 82
2x Scope 74
4x Scope 62
AWM Scope 48
Free Look 88

Redmi Note 10 / Note 10S / Note 10 Pro Sensitivity Settings

One of the most popular Free Fire phones in India. Great 90Hz screen on Pro model.

Redmi Note 10 / 10S (60Hz):

Setting Value
General 93
Red Dot 83
2x Scope 75
4x Scope 63
AWM Scope 48
Free Look 88

Redmi Note 10 Pro (90Hz):

Setting Value
General 97
Red Dot 87
2x Scope 77
4x Scope 65
AWM Scope 50
Free Look 92

With 90Hz enabled, your screen refreshes faster. You can afford slightly higher sensitivity because the movement looks smoother and more controlled.

Redmi Note 11 / Note 11S / Note 11 Pro Sensitivity Settings

Redmi Note 11 / 11S (90Hz):

Setting Value
General 96
Red Dot 86
2x Scope 76
4x Scope 64
AWM Scope 50
Free Look 90

Redmi Note 11 Pro / 11 Pro+ (120Hz):

Setting Value
General 100
Red Dot 90
2x Scope 80
4x Scope 68
AWM Scope 52
Free Look 95

Redmi Note 12 / Note 12 Pro / Note 12 Pro+ Sensitivity Settings

The Note 12 series is currently one of the best Free Fire phones in the ₹15,000–₹25,000 range.

Redmi Note 12 (120Hz AMOLED):

Setting Value
General 100
Red Dot 90
2x Scope 80
4x Scope 68
AWM Scope 52
Free Look 95

Redmi Note 12 Pro / Pro+ (120Hz):

Setting Value
General 102
Red Dot 92
2x Scope 82
4x Scope 70
AWM Scope 54
Free Look 97

Redmi Note 13 / Note 13 Pro / Note 13 Pro+ Sensitivity Settings

The Note 13 Pro+ has a 200MP camera and a 120Hz AMOLED display — one of the smoothest Free Fire experiences on a Redmi phone.

Redmi Note 13 (90Hz):

Setting Value
General 98
Red Dot 88
2x Scope 78
4x Scope 66
AWM Scope 51
Free Look 93

Redmi Note 13 Pro / Pro+ (120Hz):

Setting Value
General 103
Red Dot 93
2x Scope 83
4x Scope 71
AWM Scope 55
Free Look 98

Redmi 12 / Redmi 12 5G Sensitivity Settings

The newer Redmi 12 and 12 5G have a 90Hz screen and run Free Fire very well.

Setting Value
General 95
Red Dot 85
2x Scope 76
4x Scope 64
AWM Scope 50
Free Look 90

How to Apply These Settings in Free Fire

Step 1: Open Free Fire MAX

Step 2: Tap the Settings icon (gear) on the top-right of the home screen

Step 3: Go to the Sensitivity tab

Step 4: You will see sliders for General, Red Dot, 2x Scope, 4x Scope, AWM Scope, and Free Look

Step 5: Enter the values for your Redmi model from the tables above

Step 6: Hit Save and jump into a Training Mode match to test

Step 7: Fine-tune by ±3–5 points based on how it feels

How to Fine-Tune Your Sensitivity

Every player is different. These settings are a solid starting point, but your ideal sensitivity depends on:

  • How you hold your phone — one thumb, two thumbs, or claw grip
  • Your finger size — bigger fingers need slightly lower sensitivity
  • Your playstyle — aggressive rushing = slightly higher; long-range sniping = lower
  • Your HUD layout — custom HUD button positions change how your thumb moves

The fine-tuning method:

  1. Apply the settings from this guide
  2. Play 5 matches in Training Mode — only focus on aim, not winning
  3. If your crosshair goes past the enemy head too fast → reduce General by 3–5
  4. If your crosshair moves too slow to track enemies → increase General by 3–5
  5. Repeat until headshots feel natural and consistent

💡 Use our Free Fire Sensitivity Calculator tool on freefirenation.com — enter your phone model, grip style, and playstyle and get a custom sensitivity recommendation instantly.

Sensitivity Settings for Headshots on Redmi (One-Tap Method)

If your main goal is one-tap headshots — especially with the M1887, M82B, or shotguns — use these specialised values:

Setting Value
General 88–92
Red Dot 80–85
2x Scope 70–75
4x Scope 58–63
AWM Scope 45–50
Free Look 85–90

Why lower for headshots? Headshot sensitivity needs to be slightly lower than your general sensitivity. This gives you more precise control to place your crosshair exactly on the enemy head without overshooting. The one-tap method is all about accuracy, not speed.

Additional Settings That Affect Aim on Redmi Phones

Sensitivity is just one part. These settings also directly affect your aim quality:

Enable Gyroscope (If Your Phone Has It)

Most Redmi phones from Note series onwards have a gyroscope. Enabling this in Free Fire allows you to tilt your phone to aim — many pro players use this for micro-adjustments.

Go to: Settings → Sensitivity → Gyroscope: ON (Scope only) for beginners

Start with Gyroscope scope sensitivity at: 50–60

Touch Response Settings (MIUI/HyperOS)

On MIUI 14 or HyperOS, go to:

  • Settings → Display → Touch response → Set to High

This makes your phone screen respond faster to your touch, directly improving your in-game aim.

Keep MIUI/HyperOS Game Turbo OFF

Game Turbo on Redmi phones claims to boost performance but can actually cause input lag in Free Fire. Turn it OFF.

Go to: Settings → Special Features → Game Turbo → Disable for Free Fire

Common Sensitivity Mistakes on Redmi Phones

❌ Copying Pro Player Settings Directly Pro players use flagship phones with 144Hz screens. Their sensitivity values do NOT work the same on a 60Hz Redmi. Always use model-specific settings.

❌ Setting Everything to 100 Maximum sensitivity feels fast but kills your accuracy. You will spray bullets everywhere and miss more headshots than you hit.

❌ Never Testing in Training Mode Always test new sensitivity in Training Mode before a ranked match. Changing settings mid-ranked game will throw off your aim completely.

❌ Changing Settings Every Day Pick one setting, stick with it for at least 20 matches, and let your muscle memory build. Changing sensitivity daily prevents you from ever building consistent aim.

❌ Ignoring Graphics Settings If your game lags, even perfect sensitivity won’t help. Always match your graphics to your phone’s capability first.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the best sensitivity for Redmi Note 12 in Free Fire? A: General: 100, Red Dot: 90, 2x: 80, 4x: 68, AWM: 52, Free Look: 95. These work best for the 120Hz AMOLED display on this phone.

Q: Should I use gyroscope on Redmi for Free Fire? A: Yes, if you are willing to practice. Gyroscope helps with micro-adjustments and headshots once you are comfortable with it. Start with it enabled for scope only.

Q: Why does my sensitivity feel different after a Free Fire update? A: Garena sometimes adjusts sensitivity scaling with updates. After every major update, go to Training Mode and test your sensitivity again.

Q: What is the best sensitivity for Redmi 9A? A: General: 90, Red Dot: 80, 2x: 72, 4x: 60, AWM: 45, Free Look: 85. The 9A is a 60Hz phone so keep sensitivity on the lower side.

Q: Does MIUI affect Free Fire sensitivity? A: Yes. MIUI’s touch settings and Game Turbo directly affect how your input is processed. Set touch response to High in display settings and disable Game Turbo for Free Fire.

Q: My aim is still bad after changing sensitivity. What’s wrong? A: Sensitivity alone won’t fix aim. You also need to practise crosshair placement (aim at head height always), use crouch while shooting, and spend time in Training Mode daily. Sensitivity just makes your aim more comfortable — it does not replace practice.

Final Words

The right sensitivity settings will not make you a pro overnight. But they will remove one of the biggest obstacles between you and consistent headshots — fighting against your own phone.

Pick the settings for your Redmi model from this guide, test them in Training Mode for 15–20 minutes, and fine-tune by small amounts until it feels natural. Within a week of practice on the right settings, your headshot rate will improve noticeably.

And if you want a personalised setup without the guesswork, try our Free Fire Sensitivity Calculator on Free Fire Nation — built specifically for Indian players.

Good luck on the island. 🎯🔥

Also read on Free Fire Nation:

  • Free Fire Sensitivity Settings for Samsung Phones 2026
  • Free Fire Sensitivity Settings for Low-End Phones 2026
  • Best Free Fire Sensitivity Settings for Headshots — Universal Guide
  • Free Fire Sensitivity Calculator Tool

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