What would a methane sky look like?

The pictures of Titan’s surface taken by the Huygens probe show a hazy, yellow-orange sky above the horizon.

Thing is, Titan’s atmosphere is over 98% nitrogen, and less than 2% methane. AND, that atmosphere is hella thick, with a pressure of over 120 kPa at the surface.

What I’m wondering is:
What would the sky look like on a nice, bright, sunny day on a planet with a THIN atmosphere composed PRIMARILY, if not almost ENTIRELY, of methane?

Would the sky look orange, like on Titan?
Or would it look blue, due to the scattering of sunlight, like Earth’s air does?

The Sky on Alien Worlds

fascinating references – I’ll have to copy those and add them to my collection.
But, if I read the linked page and articles correctly, an atmosphere of 120 kPa would be 1.2 bars, and would therefore fall between the Earth-type blue and the 10 bar cyan atmosphere, so would be between the middle two colors, and closer to the Earth one. With only 2% methane and relatively low pressure, why does the sky look so yellow? The linked page indicates over 10 bars needed (maybe as much as 40) for yellow. That’s 1 million to 4 million pascals, according to the nifty converter

I suspect Titan’s atmosphere looks yellowish not because of the methane, but because of the “methane smog”. As Feat Itself’s quote states:

It would be interesting to know what kinds of materials this haze is made out of. Longer-chain hydrocarbons, maybe?

Wikipedia to the rescue: