Thmyl Lbt Twisted Metal 2 Llkmbywtr Mn Mydya Fayr 【BEST — Edition】
But “twisted metal 2” being plain suggests only the unknown words are ciphered. Could be a simple for those words only.
Given the failure, perhaps it’s (AZERTY)? If so, “thmyl” on AZERTY shifted could be “the my”? But AZERTY: t and h are same positions, m is different. 9. Another possibility: thmyl = “ the my ” but with ‘y’ and ‘l’ swapped? Or maybe it’s an anagram ? “thmyl” anagram: “my thl” — no. thmyl lbt twisted metal 2 llkmbywtr mn mydya fayr
This string — "thmyl lbt twisted metal 2 llkmbywtr mn mydya fayr" — appears to be a form of (often called “keyboard walk” or “nearby keys” substitution), possibly combined with a simple transposition or phonetic mangling. But “twisted metal 2” being plain suggests only
Let’s instead assume to get plaintext. That means: cipher letter = plain letter’s right neighbor. So to decode, shift each cipher letter left on keyboard. If so, “thmyl” on AZERTY shifted could be “the my”
thmyl → guzly — no. Or maybe it’s a keyboard row shift — each letter replaced by the one above it on QWERTY.
Cipher: t h m y l Left of t = r Left of h = g Left of m = n Left of y = t Left of l = k → r g n t k? That’s nonsense. on keyboard to get plaintext (i.e., cipher letter is left of plain) So plain = key to the right of cipher letter.
Try: thmyl — above t = g? No. Above t is 5? No.