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Which Counter Strike version do you like more?
swrya → s(19)→x, w(23)→c, r(18)→w, y(25)→e, a(1)→f → xcwef
String: — not English.
thmyl → ymr dq? Let’s do carefully: t(20)+5=25=y h(8)+5=13=m m(13)+5=18=r y(25)+5=30 mod26=4=e l(12)+5=17=r → ymrer ? Not obviously English.
String: — “yep” is English, others not. But “yep” could be a clue. So maybe each word has different shift? 15. Try ROT5 on “tyk” → “yep” is promising. Then maybe rest: “thmyl” → “ymrer” — maybe “ymrer” = “your”? No. “your” would be y o u r — y=25, o=15, u=21, r=18 — not matching. 16. Try ROT5 on whole phrase and see if it becomes meaningful: From above: ymrer yep ycp erq ke xcwef — only “yep” is English. “ke” could be “he” if shift different. Maybe not. 17. Another idea: It’s a Caesar with shift 16 (since t→j maybe?) Test: t(20)+16=36 mod26=10=j, h(8)+16=24=x, m(13)+16=29 mod26=3=d, y(25)+16=41 mod26=15=o, l(12)+16=28 mod26=2=c → jxdoc — no. 18. Could be a simple substitution where “thmyl” = “there”? Compare lengths: “thmyl” 5 letters, “there” 5 letters. t→t, h→h, m→e, y→r, l→e? That would be m=e, y=r, l=e — so e maps to both m and l? No, one-to-one fails. So not “there”. 19. Try “thmyl” = “thank” — t=t, h=h, m=a, y=n, l=k? m(13)=a(1) is shift -12 or +14; y(25)=n(14) is shift -11 or +15 — inconsistent. So no. 20. Given the lack of obvious pattern, let’s check if it’s ROT11: t(20)+11=31 mod26=5=f h(8)+11=19=s m(13)+11=24=x y(25)+11=36 mod26=10=j l(12)+11=23=w → fsxjw — no. 21. Try ROT19: t(20)+19=39 mod26=13=n h(8)+19=27 mod26=1=b m(13)+19=32 mod26=6=g y(25)+19=44 mod26=18=s l(12)+19=31 mod26=5=f → nbgsf — no. 22. Since “tyk” becomes “yep” with ROT5, maybe the key is ROT5, but I made an error in “thmyl” earlier? Let’s recompute “thmyl” ROT5 carefully: t = 20 → 25 = y h = 8 → 13 = m m = 13 → 18 = r y = 25 → 30 mod26 = 4 = e l = 12 → 17 = r So “thmyl” = “ymrer”. Not English. thmyl tyk twk yml fy swrya
t→r, y→t, k→j → rtj. Not English.
Reverse each word: thmyl → lymht tyk → kyt twk → kwt yml → lmy fy → yf swrya → ayrws
yml → y(25)→e, m(13)→r, l(12)→q → erq Not obviously English
So probably not QWERTY shift. 10. Try reversing alphabet mapping (A=Z, B=Y) but also shift? No. 11. Look for common short words: “fy” = “of” or “my” or “to” reversed? If fy = of, f=o, y=f → shift? o(15) to f(6) is -9, f(6) to o(15) inconsistent unless Atbash: f(6) ↔ u(21), not o. So no. 12. Maybe it’s Caesar with shift = position of word? Word1 shift 1: thmyl → uinz m? Let’s not guess. 13. Try ROT13 on each letter ignoring spaces? thmyl tyk twk yml fy swrya
So not ROT13. (a→f, b→g, …):
This looks like a cipher or code. Let’s break it down step by step. The phrase is: thmyl tyk twk yml fy swrya It’s all lowercase, no punctuation, spaces preserved. Possible ciphers: Caesar shift, Atbash, Vigenère, or a simple substitution. 2. Try Atbash (A ↔ Z, B ↔ Y, etc.) Atbash: a ↔ z , b ↔ y , c ↔ x , …, m ↔ n . So maybe each word has different shift
Check second word: → possible “try” if t=t, y=r, k=y means shift 0 for t, shift? y(25) to r(18) = -7 or +19; k(11) to y(25) = +14 — inconsistent. 5. Try Vigenère idea Need a key. Maybe key = “my” or “key” or something. But let’s check first letters: t,t,t,f,s — not obvious. 6. Try reverse the whole string Reverse the letters but keep words? Or reverse each word?
t(20)+5=25=y h(8)+5=13=m m(13)+5=18=r y(25)+5=30 mod26=4=e l(12)+5=17=r → ymrer
ROT13: t(20)→g h(8)→u m(13)→z y(25)→l l(12)→y → guzly tyk → t(20)g, y(25)l, k(11)x → glx twk → t(20)g, w(23)j, k(11)x → gjx yml → y(25)l, m(13)z, l(12)y → lzy fy → f(6)s, y(25)l → sl swrya → s(15)f, w(23)j, r(18)e, y(25)l, a(1)n → f j e l n
tyk → t(20)+5=25=y, y(25)+5=30→4=e, k(11)+5=16=p → yep