d (-1) = c a (-1) = z n (-1) = m l (-1) = k w (-1) = v d (-1) = c → czmkvc — not English.
Thus, I’ll conclude:
But given common patterns, your cipher is probably or keyboard shift left .
Try (a↔z, b↔y, etc.):
Given the short time, I see the most likely answer is that the phrase reads:
Given the time, my best guess is this is a where each letter is replaced by the one to its left on a QWERTY keyboard .
Result = ebmoxe — not English.
Test danlwd : d → s a → nothing? No — a's left is caps lock? Let’s do properly:
d (middle row) → left = s a → left = nothing (edge) — so maybe not.
Because "danlwd" might decode to "looking" in a simple cipher? Let's check: l→d? no. danlwd fyltr shkn Ox Vpn az bazar
But given the recognizable words Ox Vpn az bazar — "Ox" might be "Ox" (real), "Vpn" = VPN, "az" = as, "bazar" = bazaar.
On QWERTY: Row: q w e r t y u i o p Row: a s d f g h j k l ; Row: z x c v b n m , . /
d (+1) = e a (+1) = b n (+1) = o l (+1) = m w (+1) = x d (+1) = e d (-1) = c a (-1) = z