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ivangdavila

Google Play Store

by Iván · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0
linuxdarwinwin32 ✓ Security Clean
445
Downloads
1
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1
Active Installs
1
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Install in OpenClaw
/install google-play-store
Description
Publish, optimize, and scale Android apps on Google Play with release automation, ASO, policy compliance, and rejection recovery.
README (SKILL.md)

Setup

On first use, read setup.md for integration guidelines.

When to Use

User needs to publish, manage, or optimize Android apps on Google Play. Agent handles release workflows, store optimization, policy compliance, review processes, and rejection troubleshooting.

Architecture

Memory lives in ~/google-play-store/. See memory-template.md for structure.

~/google-play-store/
├── memory.md         # Account, apps, preferences
├── apps/             # Per-app tracking
│   └── {package}/    # Package-specific notes
└── checklists/       # Saved submission checklists

Quick Reference

Topic File
Setup process setup.md
Memory template memory-template.md
Release tracks and rollouts tracks.md
App Store Optimization aso.md
Policy compliance policies.md
Rejection recovery rejections.md
Automation with Fastlane fastlane.md

Core Rules

1. Release Track Progression

Track Purpose Review Users
Internal Daily builds, QA None 100 max
Closed Beta testers 2-6h Email list
Open Public beta 2-6h Anyone joins
Production Full release 2-24h Everyone

Mandatory progression for new apps:

Internal → Closed (20+ testers, 14+ days) → Production

Skip this = instant rejection. Start closed testing on day one.

2. Pre-Submission Checklist

Run before EVERY submission:

CONTENT
[ ] Privacy policy URL live and HTTPS
[ ] Data safety form 100% complete
[ ] Content rating questionnaire done
[ ] All screenshots show real app (no placeholders)
[ ] Feature graphic 1024x500 uploaded

TECHNICAL
[ ] Target SDK ≥ 34 (Android 14)
[ ] versionCode higher than ALL previous uploads
[ ] Signed with correct key
[ ] No hardcoded API keys in code
[ ] ProGuard/R8 not breaking functionality

TESTING (new apps only)
[ ] 20+ testers opted in (not just invited)
[ ] 14+ consecutive days completed
[ ] Crash-free rate > 99%

3. Version Code Strategy

versionCode must ALWAYS increase. Cannot reuse. Ever.

Pattern: YYYYMMDDHH
Example: 2025022514 (Feb 25, 2025, 2pm)

Why: Rejected uploads "burn" the versionCode.
     Multiple builds per day need unique codes.

4. App Signing Models

Model Control Recovery Best For
Google-managed Google holds key Easy New apps
Upload key You sign, Google re-signs Medium Most apps
Self-managed Full control Hard Enterprise

Recommendation: Google-managed for new apps. Upload key for updates.

Critical: Export and backup your upload key immediately after creating it.

5. Staged Rollout Protocol

Stage % Duration Gate
Canary 1% 24-48h Crashes \x3C 0.1%
Early 5% 48-72h ANRs \x3C 0.5%
Mid 20% 72-96h Ratings stable
Late 50% 96-120h No regressions
Full 100% All clear

Halt triggers: Crash spike, ANR spike, 1-star surge, critical bug reports.

6. ASO Essentials

Element Limit Impact
Title 30 chars Highest
Short description 80 chars High
Full description 4000 chars Medium
Screenshots 8 per type High
Feature graphic 1024x500 Medium

Keyword strategy:

  • Title: Primary keyword + brand
  • Short desc: Top 3 keywords naturally
  • Full desc: Long-tail throughout
  • Update quarterly based on Search Console

7. Response Time SLAs

Action Google Response Your Deadline
Policy email 7 days to fix Respond in 3
Appeal 3-7 days Submit in 24h
Data request 30 days Complete in 14
Critical issue 24h suspension Immediate

Rule: Never ignore policy emails. Silence = admission.

Common Traps

Publishing Traps

  • Skipped closed testing → Cannot release to production. 20 testers + 14 days mandatory for new apps.
  • Data safety incomplete → Instant rejection. Fill EVERY field even if "no data collected."
  • Screenshots with mockups → Rejection for misleading. Use real app screenshots only.
  • Privacy policy 404 → Rejection. Verify URL works before every submission.

Technical Traps

  • versionCode not incremented → Upload rejected. Even rejected uploads burn codes.
  • Target SDK too old → Rejection. Check current requirement before building.
  • Forgot upload key password → Cannot update app. Store password in password manager.
  • ProGuard broke app → Crashes after release. Always test release build.

Policy Traps

  • Undeclared permissions → Policy violation. Justify EVERY sensitive permission.
  • Background location without need → Rejection + strike. Remove or justify with video.
  • Kids content undeclared → Policy violation. If ANY appeal to children, declare it.
  • Deceptive ads → Suspension risk. Follow interstitial timing and close button rules.

Business Traps

  • No staged rollout → Bad update hits everyone. Always start at 1%.
  • Ignored policy email → Escalation to strike. Respond within 3 days.
  • Multiple accounts to evade → Termination. One violation becomes account death.

Security & Privacy

Data that stays local:

  • Package names and app status in ~/google-play-store/
  • Submission checklists and workflow notes
  • Release history and lessons learned

This skill stores ONLY non-sensitive metadata:

  • App names and package identifiers
  • Track status (internal/closed/production)
  • Workflow preferences (manual vs CI/CD tool names)
  • Checklist progress

This skill does NOT store and will refuse:

  • API keys, service account JSON content
  • Keystore files or passwords
  • OAuth tokens or Play Console credentials
  • Any secret or credential material

This skill does NOT:

  • Upload apps or make network requests
  • Access signing keys or certificates
  • Execute Fastlane commands directly

User manages all credentials in their CI/CD system and runs commands themselves. The Fastlane examples are documentation only.

Related Skills

Install with clawhub install \x3Cslug> if user confirms:

  • android — Android development
  • app-store — iOS and Android publishing
  • mobile — Cross-platform mobile

Feedback

  • If useful: clawhub star google-play-store
  • Stay updated: clawhub sync
Usage Guidance
This skill is coherent with its stated purpose, but before installing: (1) confirm you’re comfortable with the agent creating ~/google-play-store/ and saving non-sensitive metadata there; (2) never paste service-account JSONs, keystore files, passwords, or other secrets into that memory — use CI secret stores or a password manager as the docs advise; (3) review the Fastlane lanes and CI scripts the agent may suggest before running them (they reference environment variables and secret decoding commands); (4) because the skill source is listed as unknown and it’s instruction-only, it cannot execute code on install but it can guide you to run commands — verify commands and CI config in a safe/dev account first. If the skill ever asks to store credentials in its memory or to send files to an external URL not documented in the Play/Fastlane flow, decline and review those requests.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: google-play-store Version: 1.0.0 The OpenClaw AgentSkills skill bundle for 'google-play-store' is classified as benign. The `SKILL.md` explicitly states that the skill does NOT store credentials, make network requests, or execute Fastlane commands directly, clarifying that Fastlane examples in `fastlane.md` are for the user's CI/CD systems. The `memory-template.md` further reinforces that no sensitive data is stored locally. All instructions for the agent are focused on providing guidance and managing non-sensitive metadata related to Google Play Store processes, without any evidence of malicious prompt injection, data exfiltration, or unauthorized execution.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
Name/description (Google Play publishing, ASO, policy/rejection recovery) match the contents: many docs about tracks, Fastlane automation, policy forms, and checklists. The skill does not ask for unrelated binaries, cloud credentials, or system-wide access.
Instruction Scope
The SKILL.md and companion files instruct the agent to create and maintain a local memory directory (~/google-play-store/) and to ask the user onboarding questions — this is reasonable for a publishing assistant. The docs include concrete Fastlane examples and CI snippets that reference service-account JSONs and keystore secrets; these are standard for Play uploads but are external to the skill (the skill does not itself demand these secrets). The skill explicitly warns not to store credentials in memory, which is good practice, but users should ensure the agent follows that guidance.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec and no code files to execute — instruction-only. That minimizes on-disk code risk. The Fastlane/CI guidance references installing Fastlane via brew/gem, but the skill does not perform installs itself.
Credentials
The skill declares no required environment variables or credentials. Example workflows show needing a Play service account JSON and keystore secrets (typical and proportional for Play uploads). Because the skill will prompt about CI/keys during setup, users must avoid pasting raw credentials into the skill's memory and should keep secrets in CI secret stores or password managers as recommended.
Persistence & Privilege
always:false and the skill stores data only under a dedicated ~/google-play-store/ folder per its docs. It does not request system-wide configuration changes or elevated privileges and does not modify other skills.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install google-play-store
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /google-play-store
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial release
Metadata
Slug google-play-store
Version 1.0.0
License
All-time Installs 1
Active Installs 1
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Google Play Store?

Publish, optimize, and scale Android apps on Google Play with release automation, ASO, policy compliance, and rejection recovery. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 445 downloads so far.

How do I install Google Play Store?

Run "/install google-play-store" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Google Play Store free?

Yes, Google Play Store is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Google Play Store support?

Google Play Store is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (linux, darwin, win32).

Who created Google Play Store?

It is built and maintained by Iván (@ivangdavila); the current version is v1.0.0.

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