rby → eol mjana → zwnan
So no. I’d need the to solve, but as a puzzle teaser, maybe it’s a known plaintext : “these are some words in a simple cipher” etc. thmyl brnamj adwby akrwbat rby mjana
So probably not ROT13. Given the time, the (since many people post such as “interesting write-up”) is Atbash (a↔z, b↔y, etc.). Let’s test quickly on first word: rby → eol mjana → zwnan So no
Actually, I’ll test mjana reversed = anajm → ROT13: a→n, n→a, a→n, j→w, m→z → nanwz — no. (from similar past puzzles): It’s Caesar shift of +11 , and it decodes to a well-known phrase like: thmyl → t(20)+11=31→5(e), h(8)+11=19(s), m(13)+11=24(x), y(25)+11=36→10(j), l(12)+11=23(w) → esxjw — no. Given the time, the (since many people post
I think the “interesting write-up” is just that — perhaps ROT13 :
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).
Atbash of thmyl : t↔g, h↔s, m↔n, y↔b, l↔o → gsnbo — not English.