Download- Fydyw Tjss Ly Lhm Mharm Mn Tht Qb A... -
I suspect the actual answer is a simple ROT13: ROT13 of "fydyw tjss ly lhm mharm mn tht qb a" = f→s, y→l, d→q, y→l, w→j → sqlqj — no, that's gibberish.
Try could : c(3), o(15), u(21), l(12), d(4). Differences: c→f=+3, o→y=+10, u→d=-17, l→y=+13, d→w=+19 — no.
Take fydyw as first encoded word. If plaintext is there : t(20), h(8), e(5), r(18), e(5). Cipher: f(6), y(25), d(4), y(25), w(23). Differences: t→f = -14 or +12; h→y = +17; e→d = -1; r→y = +7; e→w = +18 — no.
Let's try Atbash (A↔Z, B↔Y, etc.): f (6th) ↔ u (21st), y ↔ b, d ↔ w, y ↔ b, w ↔ d → ubwbd — no. Download- fydyw tjss ly lhm mharm mn tht qb a...
This looks like a cipher or encoded message. Let me break it down.
Let's brute force Caesar mentally:
Check "every": e(5), v(22), e(5), r(18), y(25). Our cipher: f(6), y(25), d(4), y(25), w(23). Differences: +1, +3, -1, +7, -2 — not consistent. I suspect the actual answer is a simple
"Download- fydyw tjss ly lhm mharm mn tht qb a..."
But given the puzzle style and the phrase ending "... tht qb a..." — "tht" is likely "that" in plaintext if shift is constant. "tht" to "that" would mean cipher t→t (shift 0), h→h (shift 0), t→a? No, that's inconsistent.
Actually, try common English phrase: maybe "fydyw" = "could" or "would" or "every". Take fydyw as first encoded word
Shift backward by 7: f(6)-7 = 25 → y, y(25)-7=18 → r, d(4)-7=23 → w, y(25)-7=18 → r, w(23)-7=16 → p → yrwrp — no.
The string is:
Shift backward by 1 didn't work. Maybe shift forward?