Rwayt Myhaf Wfysl Kamlh Bdwn Rdwd Mntdy Ghram Link

r → m w → r a → v y → t t → o → “mrvto” (still not clear)

If we try a Caesar shift of -3 (common in simple ciphers): rwayt myhaf wfysl kamlh bdwn rdwd mntdy ghram

Wait — what if it’s reversed per word? “rwayt” reversed = “tyawr” — no. r → m w → r a →

r (18th letter) → i (9th) w (23) → d (4) a (1) → z (26) y (25) → b (2) t (20) → g (7) → “idzbg” (no) So not likely

Apply to “rwayt”: r→e, w→q, a→(none — so maybe skip or error?), y→t, t→r → “eq?tr” — fails because a has no left. So not likely.

But I notice “rwayt” looks like “write” if w→r? No.

This looks like a phrase written in a shifted or scrambled alphabet, possibly a simple Caesar cipher or a keyboard-shift cipher. Let me try a quick Caesar shift analysis.