I like this camera a lot but it is too complex to remember all the options.
I know this is not what you asked, but... I used to occasionally deal with this sort of thing at the outfit where I worked. Couple thousand full-time portrait studios with many relatively "untrained" photographers. ("Camera operators" is probably a better way to put it.) They were mostly good at working with their subjects, and not so much with the technical details of the camera equipment.
There was a large staff of in-house tech support people to assist the studio people. When studio has a problem they call in; tech support ideally solves camera problems in one to two minutes. But... tech support also has a number of relatively untrained staff. So... how to deal with this?
I was, at that time, one of the main people doing preliminary evaluations for cameras to potentially be used in the studio chain. So, tech support has to be able to support anything we want to trial in any studios. So the problem is, how can we make this work? (Fwiw we generally used mid-grade pro type cameras of the day).
A method I came up with was this: these cameras generally had, on the display screen, one information menu that displayed icons for nearly all of the major settings. Perhaps 15 or so icons. So I made a one or two page document for these. First I photographed this info screen in the preferred configuration. This is the first item in my document. I numbered every item, in sequence (each number has arrow pointing to the icon). Next, the document lists every item, what it is, with a short description of how to set it. I included snapshots of the camera menu where these get set, etc., so tech support can confirm that the studio is doing it correctly.
This pretty much solved our tech support problems for the camera in question. Studio calls in, tech support answers. If tech support thinks a likely camera problem they pull up the document for the specific camera in question. They guide the studio to the info menu and have the studio describe each icon, one by one. Since tech support is looking at an image of said info screen, they can easily recognize if the studio is describing the correct icon. If something is wrong, say icon #12, for example, they go down their document to #12, which will describe a menu sequence to fix the setting. Note that there are typically several ways to change some given setting; the document would typically give a straightforward menu-based method of getting there.
This sort of document is something I would recommend to anyone doing professional work with any relatively new (to them) digital camera. It used to take me, as I recall, about a day or two to make one of these docs. But this includes making it "readable" with correct grammar, etc. For hobbyists, mainly playing around, it's not usually a big deal to take the time to wade through the camera manual. But imagine shooting a wedding, or whatever, and one of your big thumbs accidentally rolls a control dial, etc., without your noticing it.
Sorry to answer the wrong question, but I think this is something a lot of people could benefit from.
FWIW I'm not familiar with pro grade cameras of the last 10 years or so. So I'm presuming that they still have similar info menus. But perhaps not? I dunno.