# App Store Release Notes Guidelines ## Goals - Produce user-facing release notes that describe visible changes since the last tag. - Include all user-impacting changes; omit purely internal or refactor-only work. - Keep language plain, short, and benefit-focused. ## Output Shape - Prefer 5 to 10 bullets total for most releases. - Group by theme if needed: New, Improved, Fixed. - Each bullet should be one sentence and start with a verb. - Avoid internal codenames, ticket IDs, or file paths. ## Filtering Rules - Include: new features, UI changes, behavior changes, bug fixes users would notice, performance improvements with visible impact. - Exclude: refactors, dependency bumps, CI changes, developer tooling, internal logging, analytics changes unless they affect user privacy or behavior. - If a change is ambiguous, ask for clarification or describe it as a small improvement only if it is user-visible. ## Language Guidance - Translate technical terms into user-facing descriptions. - Avoid versions of "API", "refactor", "nil", "crash log", or "dependency". - Prefer "Improved", "Added", "Fixed", "Updated" or action verbs like "Search", "Upload", "Sync". - Keep tense present or past: "Added", "Improved", "Fixed". ## Examples - "Added account switching from the profile menu." - "Improved timeline loading speed on slow connections." - "Fixed media attachments not opening in full screen." ## QA Checklist - Every bullet ties to a real change in the range. - No duplicate bullets that describe the same change. - No internal jargon or file paths. - Final list fits App Store text limits for the target storefront if provided.