Pro Crosshair Code Database — CS2 + Valorant (2026)
By Mustafa Bilgic, FPS gaming enthusiast (Adiyaman, Turkiye) — last reviewed 2026-05-06.
A curated list of 50+ pro player crosshair codes for CS2 and Valorant. Each entry includes the player, team or affiliation, a description of the crosshair shape, and a citation to a public source (Twitch panel, ProSettings.net listing, or VOD). Click Copy to grab the code, then paste into the game's crosshair-share dialog.
Citation principle. Crosshair codes change. Each entry below cites a specific public source we verified at the time of listing. If a player updates their crosshair, the cited link will usually show the newest version, even if our snapshot lags by a few days.
How to import a crosshair code
CS2
Open CS2 → Settings → Game → Crosshair.
Click Share or Import.
Paste the code (begins with CSGO-) and confirm.
Valorant
Open Valorant → Settings → Crosshair.
Open the Import Profile Code dialog.
Paste the code and confirm.
Crosshair theory: what to copy and what not to
Most pro crosshairs share three traits worth borrowing:
High contrast — bright cyan, magenta, or yellow. Map edges almost never use these tones, so the crosshair stays visible.
Centre-dot consideration — many pros use a centre dot for sniping or tap-fire reference. Dot-only crosshairs reduce visual clutter but lose horizontal recoil reference.
Static (no expansion) — most CS2 and Valorant pros disable dynamic spread because the on-screen feedback delays muscle-memory adjustment.
Things not always worth copying:
Outline thickness — depends heavily on your monitor's contrast and brightness.
Specific colours — if your map style differs, switch to a contrasting hue. Cyan for default, yellow for green-heavy maps.
The exact gap and length — these are deeply personal. Tune ±1 on a sample of pro values until you stop noticing the crosshair in-game.
Why this matters for aim training
Crosshair stability is one of the four conditions for deliberate practice (Ericsson, Krampe and Tesch-Romer, 1993). If your crosshair varies from session to session, the immediate feedback element is degraded and skill consolidation slows. Pick one crosshair, lock it in for 30 days minimum, then evaluate. Most aim coaches converge on this advice.