Thmyl Tlghram Layt Llandrwyd Official
No.
Try ROT13: t→g, h→u, m→z, y→l, l→y → g u z l y t→g, l→y, g→t, h→u, r→e, a→n, m→z → g y t u e n z l→y, a→n, y→l, t→g → y n l g l→y, l→y, a→n, n→a, d→q, r→e, w→j, y→l, d→q → y y n a q e j l q thmyl tlghram layt llandrwyd
That’s messy. But if it's on QWERTY:
t→g, h→s, m→n, y→b, l→o → gsnbo (no) No. Try ROT13: t→g
But a might be: Auto-detect and decode simple substitution ciphers (Caesar, Atbash, keyboard shift) in user input. Example: if user types "thmyl tlghram layt llandrwyd" , the system tries common shifts and suggests likely plaintext like "the military telegram last llandrwyd" (if llandrwyd is a name). thmyl tlghram layt llandrwyd
