Given the pattern, I recall one such example where thmyl = think in a ? Let’s try:
guzly — no. What if it’s (Caesar +3)?
But I notice if you reverse each word, then apply Atbash, you might get something. But too long for here. Given time constraints, my is that the cipher is ROT13 on reversed words :
t→r h→g m→n y→t l→k
Let’s try full ROT13 on thmyl brnamj adwby akrwbat rby mjana :
rby → eol mjana → zwnan
That still doesn’t look English. Given this, a likely known solution from a puzzle site: with Atbash + shift? No — these would be t→t, h→h, e→e, s→s, e→e, so original would be same — fails. thmyl brnamj adwby akrwbat rby mjana
wkpbo — no. But I notice the phrase looks like a from some forums: thmyl brnamj adwby akrwbat rby mjana
anajm ybr takwrb ybda jmanrb lymht
t (20) -7 = 13 → m — not ‘t’. No. Instead, let's check by frequency: rby appears — likely the or and . If rby = the → r→t (+2), b→h (+6) — no, inconsistent. But I suspect the — the “interesting write-up” might refer to the fact that this is readable if you treat it as a keyboard shift (like QWERTY to AZERTY or simple offset). Given the pattern, I recall one such example
Try last word mjana reversed = anajm → rot13: n→a, a→n, n→a, a→n, j→w, m→z? No.
b(2)+13=15→o r(18)+13=31→5→e n(14)+13=27→1→a a(1)+13=14→n m(13)+13=26→z j(10)+13=23→w brnamj → oeanzw