Settings
One sheet, opened from Home's avatar circle, holding everything that isn't a practice tool — appearance, playing defaults, permissions, recording behavior, accessibility, and support.
Settings opens as a sheet from the circle in the top-right corner of Home. It doesn't help you play anything — it's where the app's preferences and permissions live, grouped into rows: appearance, playing preferences, permissions, recording behavior, accessibility, and support. Most of it you'll set once, during onboarding, and never think about again. This is where you come back if you change your mind.
Appearance
The theme picker sits at the top of the sheet: four looks carried over from onboarding — Sand & Linen, Strata, Terra, and Obsidian. Picking one works exactly the way it did there: tap a card and the whole app re-skins itself immediately, live, no restart and no preview render standing in for the real thing. Sand & Linen is the default. Switch as often as you like.

Skill level & tuning
Two quick pickers here, not deep menus. Skill level is the same setting from onboarding — Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced, or Returning — and changing it here reshapes which songs get suggested to you, the same way it did on day one. Tuning is the tuner's active preset — Standard, Low-G, Baritone, D Tuning, or any custom tuning you've saved. Change it from Settings and it's already set the next time you open Tuner — no need to go there first just to switch tunings.
Permissions
This row reads your actual iOS permission state, live, and shows it plainly: granted or not, for microphone and camera. Tap a permission that hasn't been decided yet and you get the real system prompt. Tap one you've already denied and Settings deep-links you straight to the app's page in iOS Settings instead. Microphone powers the tuner, capturing audio ideas, and every recording feature in the app — takes, jam takes, loop takes. Camera powers the document scanner that reads a chord sheet off a printed or handwritten page.
the deep-link isn't a design choice, it's an iOS constraint. Once you deny a permission, apps can't re-trigger that system prompt — the only way back is through iOS Settings, so that's where this row sends you.

Recording preferences
A toggle turns the 3-2-1 count-in on or off before a Jam or loop take starts recording — useful if you want a beat to find your footing, unnecessary if you're already playing when you hit record. Below it, a note that every recording in the app is saved as high-quality AAC, not something you can change per take. Underneath that, a live-computed total: how much storage every recording on your device — song takes, ideas, jam takes, loop takes, all of it — is currently using.
Recently Deleted
Delete a recording — a take, an idea, a jam take, a loop take — and it doesn't disappear right away. It sits in Recently Deleted for 30 days, the same safety net Voice Memos gives you, in case a delete was a mistake or you change your mind. Each item in the list gives you two choices: Restore it back to where it came from, or delete it permanently, right now, instead of waiting out the 30 days.

Accessibility
One toggle: Reduced Motion. Turn it on and the pulsing indicators and loading animations scattered through the app — the tuner's pitch-meter glow, loading spinners, anything that moves on its own — get minimized app-wide. It's there for anyone sensitive to that kind of motion, not a visual preference.
Support
Three things share this row. Tip Jar is an optional, no-obligation tip, bought as an in-app purchase, with a few preset amounts to choose from — the app is upfront that every feature works the same whether you tip or not, it's not a paywall wearing a friendlier name. Contact opens a pre-addressed email to hello@ukulele-buddha.com for a bug report, a song request, or anything else worth telling someone about. Website links out to ukulele-buddha.com, if you want to see what else is going on with the app outside of it.
Privacy
An analytics toggle, off by default. Turn it on and the app sends anonymous usage data; leave it off and it sends nothing at all — there's no data collected in the background waiting for permission you haven't given. Below the toggle, links out to the privacy policy and terms of use if you want the details in full.