Cupertino Mirror — iOS Settings Bento
A slide built around the visual grammar of Apple's Settings app — grouped rounded-rectangle cell lists, SF Symbol squircle icons, and a system-gray canvas — transplanted from phone to deck without sacrificing a pixel of HIG fidelity.
This template exists for speakers who need to present mobile UX, app architecture, or privacy flows using the exact visual language their audience already navigates daily. It refuses the generic 'device mockup screenshot' approach, instead treating the grouped list cell as the atomic unit of composition: one idea, one icon, one label, one chevron. Decoration is the system itself. The status bar and device frame are not chrome — they are authority signals that tell a technical audience this presenter thinks in platforms.
Good for
- · App feature walkthroughs structured around Settings-style navigation hierarchies
- · Privacy and permission setting explanations in product or compliance decks
- · iOS platform design critiques and Apple HIG deep-dives
- · Developer conference slides demoing mobile UI patterns to technical audiences
Avoid for
- · Chart-heavy quarterly business reviews needing large data surfaces
- · Abstract brand storytelling or emotional campaign presentations
- · Large auditorium screens where 6-cell mobile detail reads as illegible noise
- · Non-tech audiences with no mental model of iOS navigation conventions
Tags
More in Bento Grid
Calm Linen — Notion-Style Documentation Bento
A warm-cream, shadow-free bento grid housing four live UI fragments — database table, kanban board, meeting notes, and task checklist — inside hairline-bordered cards. Communicates feature breadth at a glance without resorting to icon grids or marketing copy.
Crystal Grid — Apple-Keynote Feature Bento
Five rounded, glassy tiles — one dominant 2×2 hero flanked by four 1×1 feature cells — built to reveal product strengths the way Apple does: one icon, one phrase, nothing more. The soft inner highlight gradient keeps each tile tactile without competing with its content.
Linear Changelog — Onyx Release Grid
A 2×2 developer-aesthetic bento that distills a software release into four equal tiles — New, Improved, Fixed, and API — each anchored by a status badge and a commit-style monospace tag on a near-black canvas. Where most bento templates flex layout variety, this one enforces strict parity to mirror the discipline of a real changelog.