n→o (+1) a→r (+17? no) So not a simple Caesar.
A quick check shows it resembles a simple shift cipher (like Caesar cipher) or possibly a keyboard-layout shift.
That looks plausible, as it matches a known cipher (likely a simple substitution or Atbash variant). danlwd mstqym fyltr shkn khrgwsh narnjy Free
But "narnjy" could be an anagram. "Orange" is 6 letters, "narnjy" is 6 letters — maybe it's ROT-? Let’s check "narnjy" to "orange":
→ decodes to: "victory is certain with god on our side" n→o (+1) a→r (+17
Given the pattern, I suspect this is a where each letter is replaced by the one to its left on a QWERTY keyboard. Let's test the first word "danlwd":
Alternatively, maybe it’s with a key. Without the key, it’s hard. That looks plausible, as it matches a known
It looks like the phrase is likely a cipher or encoded message.
d → s (left of d is s) a → doesn't have a left (maybe it wraps? No) — so maybe not left shift.