Generate user-facing App Store release notes from git history since the last tag.
Install with the open skills CLI (global, non-interactive — available in every Claude Code session):
npx skills add sickn33/agentic-awesome-skills --skill "app-store-changelog" -g -a claude-code -yOr manually — clone and copy the skill directory (SKILL.md + companion files):
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/sickn33/agentic-awesome-skills /tmp/agentic-awesome-skills && cp -r /tmp/agentic-awesome-skills/plugins/agentic-awesome-skills-claude/skills/app-store-changelog ~/.claude/skills/app-store-changelog-sickn33This skill is a directory: SKILL.md is the entry point; the files below ship with it.
---
name: app-store-changelog
description: Generate user-facing App Store release notes from git history since the last tag.
risk: safe
source: "Dimillian/Skills (MIT)"
date_added: "2026-03-25"
---
# App Store Changelog
## Overview
Generate a comprehensive, user-facing changelog from git history since the last tag, then translate commits into clear App Store release notes.
## When to Use
- When the user asks for App Store "What's New" text or release notes from git history.
- When you need to turn raw commits into concise, user-facing release bullets.
## Workflow
### 1) Collect changes
- Run `scripts/collect_release_changes.sh` from the repo root to gather commits and touched files.
- If needed, pass a specific tag or ref: `scripts/collect_release_changes.sh v1.2.3 HEAD`.
- If no tags exist, the script falls back to full history.
### 2) Triage for user impact
- Scan commits and files to identify user-visible changes.
- Group changes by theme (New, Improved, Fixed) and deduplicate overlaps.
- Drop internal-only work (build scripts, refactors, dependency bumps, CI).
### 3) Draft App Store notes
- Write short, benefit-focused bullets for each user-facing change.
- Use clear verbs and plain language; avoid internal jargon.
- Prefer 5 to 10 bullets unless the user requests a different length.
### 4) Validate
- Ensure every bullet maps back to a real change in the range.
- Check for duplicates and overly technical wording.
- Ask for clarification if any change is ambiguous or possibly internal-only.
## Commit-to-Bullet Examples
The following shows how raw commits are translated into App Store bullets:
| Raw commit message | App Store bullet |
|---|---|
| `fix(auth): resolve token refresh race condition on iOS 17` | • Fixed a login issue that could leave some users unexpectedly signed out. |
| `feat(search): add voice input to search bar` | • Search your library hands-free with the new voice input option. |
| `perf(timeline): lazy-load images to reduce scroll jank` | • Scrolling through your timeline is now smoother and faster. |
Internal-only commits that are **dropped** (no user impact):
- `chore: upgrade fastlane to 2.219`
- `refactor(network): extract URLSession wrapper into module`
- `ci: add nightly build job`
## Example Output
```
What's New in Version 3.4
• Search your library hands-free with the new voice input option.
• Scrolling through your timeline is now smoother and faster.
• Fixed a login issue that could leave some users unexpectedly signed out.
• Added dark-mode support to the settings screen.
• Improved load times when opening large photo albums.
```
## Output Format
- Title (optional): "What's New" or product name + version.
- Bullet list only; one sentence per bullet.
- Stick to storefront limits if the user provides one.
## Resources
- `scripts/collect_release_changes.sh`: Collect commits and touched files since last tag.
- `references/release-notes-guidelines.md`: Language, filtering, and QA rules for App Store notes.
## Limitations
- Use this skill only when the task clearly matches the scope described above.
- Do not treat the output as a substitute for environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review.
- Stop and ask for clarification if required inputs, permissions, safety boundaries, or success criteria are missing.
Use when completing tasks, implementing major features, or before merging to verify work meets requirements
Use when starting feature work that needs isolation from current workspace or before executing implementation plans - ensures an isolated workspace exists via native tools or git worktree fallback
Use when you have a spec or requirements for a multi-step task, before touching code