CS2 Resolution & Aspect Ratio Calculator
Find the perfect resolution for your CS2 setup. Compare aspect ratios, understand FOV differences, and see what resolution the pros use.
Resolution Comparison Tool
Select or enter two resolutions to compare FOV, pixel count, and aspect ratio differences.
Resolution A
Resolution B
Aspect Ratio Comparison
16:9 (Native)
Full horizontal field of view. See everything on screen. Models appear at their normal width. Best for spotting enemies at the edge of your vision.
16:10
Slight reduction in horizontal FOV. A compromise between 16:9 and 4:3. Rarely used competitively but comfortable for some players.
4:3 Stretched
Image is stretched to fill the screen. Player models appear ~25% wider, making them subjectively easier to hit. Significant FPS boost. Used by ~60% of professional players.
4:3 Black Bars
4:3 resolution with black bars on the sides. Models retain their original proportions. Smaller viewable area helps some players focus on the center of the screen.
Horizontal FOV by Aspect Ratio
CS2's base vertical FOV is 73.74°. Horizontal FOV scales with aspect ratio.
What Resolution Do Pros Use?
Resolution settings from top CS2 professional players. Note: players frequently change settings.
| Player | Resolution | Aspect Ratio | Display Mode |
|---|---|---|---|
| s1mple | 1280x960 | 4:3 | Stretched |
| ZywOo | 1280x960 | 4:3 | Stretched |
| NiKo | 1280x960 | 4:3 | Stretched |
| m0NESY | 1280x960 | 4:3 | Stretched |
| donk | 1280x960 | 4:3 | Stretched |
| device | 1024x768 | 4:3 | Stretched |
| ropz | 1920x1080 | 16:9 | Native |
| Twistzz | 1280x960 | 4:3 | Stretched |
| b1t | 1280x960 | 4:3 | Stretched |
| electronic | 1280x960 | 4:3 | Stretched |
| rain | 1920x1080 | 16:9 | Native |
| broky | 1024x768 | 4:3 | Black Bars |
| EliGE | 1280x960 | 4:3 | Stretched |
| NAF | 1920x1080 | 16:9 | Native |
| FalleN | 1024x768 | 4:3 | Stretched |
| Stewie2k | 1280x960 | 4:3 | Black Bars |
| coldzera | 1024x768 | 4:3 | Stretched |
| Aleksib | 1920x1080 | 16:9 | Native |
| apEX | 1280x960 | 4:3 | Stretched |
| Magisk | 1920x1080 | 16:9 | Native |
Pro Resolution Distribution
How to Set Up Stretched Resolution
Set CS2 Resolution
Open CS2 → Settings → Video → Resolution. Select your desired 4:3 resolution (e.g., 1280x960). Set display mode to Fullscreen.
Configure GPU Scaling (NVIDIA)
Open NVIDIA Control Panel → Display → Adjust desktop size and position → Select "Full-screen" under scaling mode → Apply.
Configure GPU Scaling (AMD)
Open AMD Radeon Settings → Display → GPU Scaling: On → Scaling Mode: Full Panel → Apply.
Verify In-Game
Launch CS2 and verify the image fills your screen. If you see black bars, the GPU scaling setting isn't applied correctly. Try toggling fullscreen/windowed and back.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is 4:3 stretched better than 16:9 in CS2?
- 4:3 stretched makes player models appear wider, which some players find easier to aim at. However, you lose peripheral vision (reduced horizontal FOV). Most pros use 4:3 stretched, but it is personal preference — 16:9 gives you more information on screen.
- What resolution do most CS2 pros use?
- The most popular pro resolution is 1280x960 (4:3 stretched), followed by 1024x768 and 1920x1080 (native 16:9). About 60% of professional players use some form of 4:3 resolution.
- Does resolution affect FPS in CS2?
- Yes. Lower resolutions render fewer pixels, which can significantly boost FPS. Switching from 1920x1080 to 1280x960 can increase FPS by 30-50% depending on your GPU. This is why many players on older hardware prefer lower resolutions.
- What is the difference between stretched and black bars?
- Both use a 4:3 resolution. Stretched fills your entire screen by stretching the image horizontally — models look wider but distorted. Black bars keep the native aspect ratio with unused black space on the sides — models look normal but your usable screen area is smaller.
- How do I set up stretched resolution in CS2?
- Set your in-game resolution to a 4:3 option (like 1280x960), then in your GPU control panel (NVIDIA Control Panel or AMD Radeon Settings) set the display scaling mode to "Full-screen" instead of "Aspect ratio". This forces the image to stretch across your entire monitor.