"Download- nwdz w rd lshrmwtt twnsyt tql wtry ..."
Better to test the whole phrase:
Maybe it's reversed typing? But known puzzle: "nwdz w rd lshrmwtt twnsyt tql wtry" decodes to "good paper: download …" possibly "download this file …" but "good paper" might be original.
Given the context — "good paper: 'Download- nwdz...'" — likely the phrase after "Download-" is the title in a simple cipher. In Atbash, "nwdz" → "m dwa" which isn't right. But in (a→n, b→o…):
In Atbash, known example: "n w d z" → m d w a = "mdwa" no.
Wait, try right shift? Let's instead test a real solved example. I recall "nwdz" in left-shift (QWERTY): n ← b? Let's map properly: QWERTY row: q w e r t y u i o p Left of n is b (since row: … b n m) — yes! Left of w is q Left of d is s Left of z is a → "bqsa" — still nonsense.
Atbash:
n→m w→d d→w z→a → "mdwa"