US

leaf

Nathan Orf

Valorant G2 Sentinel

Mouse Settings

DPI 1600
In-Game Sensitivity 0.8
eDPI 1280
Polling Rate 2000 Hz
Resolution 1920x1080
Refresh Rate 360 Hz

Mouse: Logitech G PRO 2 LIGHTSPEED

Full specifications of the mouse leaf uses.

Weight 80 g
Length 125 mm
Width 63.5 mm
Height 40 mm
Sensor HERO 2
DPI Range 100 – 44,000
Polling Rate 125 / 250 / 500 / 1000 / 2000 / 4000 Hz
Buttons 9
Connectivity 2.4 GHz Wireless, Wired USB
Battery Life 95 h
Shape symmetrical
RGB No
Feet Material PTFE
Release Year 2024

🇺🇸 Nathan “leaf” Orf is a professional Valorant player for Cloud9, known for his clean mechanical aim and initiator play. Leaf was one of the first North American talents to gain widespread recognition in Valorant’s competitive ecosystem. His methodical, precise playstyle is reflected in his mouse settings — among the lowest eDPI of any professional player in the database.

Current Mouse: Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2

Leaf uses the Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2. The 60g wireless mouse with LIGHTFORCE optical switches is a natural pairing with his low-sensitivity, arm-aiming style. The compact dimensions (125mm × 63.5mm × 40mm) suit a player who relies on large arm movements rather than wrist flicking.

The Superlight 2’s LIGHTSPEED wireless eliminates any input latency concern, and the PTFE feet enable smooth, consistent large mouse movements that his low sensitivity requires.

In-Game Settings Breakdown

An eDPI of 272 is extremely low — among the lowest in professional Valorant. Most pros operate between 200 and 600 eDPI; leaf’s 272 places him at the very bottom end of the professional range. This requires a large mousepad and significant arm movement for even moderate cursor traversal.

Why These Settings?

Leaf’s ultra-low eDPI of 272 reflects a pure arm-aiming approach. At 272 eDPI, small wrist movements barely register — all precision comes from controlled, large arm movements. This style favors consistent muscle memory for long-range angles and reduces micro-shake from wrist tremor. The trade-off is slower target acquisition speed in close-range scenarios, which leaf compensates for with map knowledge and positioning.

Using 800 hardware DPI (rather than 400) with a very low in-game sensitivity is a method some players use to optimize sensor accuracy — the sensor operates at a cleaner DPI tier while the in-game multiplier achieves the desired eDPI.

Gear Summary

Follow leaf: Twitter/X · Twitch