Sensitivity is a common word in the gaming industry. I’d recommend keeping this between 1 to 1.3. There’s a lot of information your eyes can see in the middle of the transition such as a loose ball, your teammate going for the ball, or an opponent suddenly pressuring you. You may feel that turning this one on to the highest would be smart as it starts to snap back and forth saving you a lot of time to dunk on those noobs. Down to preference.ġ1-Transition Speed: Controls the speed of switching between your two camera modes. I’d highly recommend turning on Freeplay and trying this one out yourself.ĭuring fast-paced games in the upper leagues of Diamond where you’ll be turning back and forth, you may thank yourself for adjusting this one. Squishy prefers 0.45.ġ0- Swivel Speed: This one decides how fast your camera will swivel around your car. Somewhere in the middle of 0.35 to 0.70 is the general use. Too low and your car may just drift off-screen. Turning this one on too high will make your camera move just as much as your car which may cause everything around you to feel like a blur. You’ll be drifting and turning your car around a lot. I like a -4 personally.ĩ- Stiffness: This controls how hard and precise your camera will follow your car. It’s usually between 90 to 110, so I like to go down the middle at 100.Ĩ- Angle: This decides the default angle your camera will be pointing towards your car.Īgain, mostly down to preference, but this angle is more relevant to choose as your hand-eye coordination depends on it. Since your car will be all over the place in a game of rocket league, you probably want to see as much of it as possible.ħ- Height: Similar to distance, this controls how high your camera will be positioned above your car. I personally like to copy Squishy’s 270 on this one. Most players keep this at a standard 260 to 290. It may be uncomfortable at first, but it beats having your opponents come out of your blindside to beat you to the ball.Ħ- Distance: This controls how far your camera will be behind your car. I’d personally recommend 110 since it gives you maximum sight.
Setting this at somewhere between 100 to 110 would be best. The more you see, the better decisions you’ll make. It brings no advantage and almost all players have it turned off.ĥ- Field of View: Controls how much of the field you see.
Set this to your region or the closest to you. If you’re wondering why all the tournaments are so late, early, or laggy.for once, it’s actually your ping’s fault.Choosing “Main Stats only” to block useless notifications from hogging up a good part of your screen every 10 seconds.ģ- Tournament Schedule Region: Selects which tournament schedule you will be playing based on a region.Setting this to “Team Only” will allow you to stay focused on the game and probably rage less.Ģ- Game Stat Display Level: Shows the various stat notifications you receive during gameplay.However, there are a few things here that could enhance your gaming experience.ġ- Text Chat: Controls what types of text messages you’d like to receive from all the players, including all those pesky 12-year-old kids spamming “What a save!” Just a bunch of bandwidth client mumbo jumbo you probably don’t care about and should leave on default. Starting off with the Gameplay settings, there’s nothing too complicated here. Whether you’re new to the game or a seasoned pro, let’s take a look at 25 settings that could make the difference for you. It’s at that point you begin to realize the massive impact these minor settings changes can have on your game experience and road to hitting that sweet sweet 360 Musty flick. Every “try hard sweat” to ever play the game will tell you that mastering the basics is only the beginning of your journey. There’s no doubt about it that Rocket League is one of the most mechanically challenging games to ever exist. Whenever you start a new game, you can just play the tutorial, learn the controls, and you’re good to go, right? Not in Rocket League. Time for a pit stop, let's fine tune every single setting that will up your game!