Let’s try "right shift" instead: t → y (t’s right is y) n → m (n’s right is m) z → x y → u l → ; (semicolon, maybe omitted in output) — seems messy. Given your exact request — “good review:” + the ciphertext — : "Great product, works as expected, highly recommend" But without a clear cipher key, I can't decode it.
That doesn’t look like a sensible review. Could it be a (e.g., each letter replaced by the one to its left on QWERTY)? tnzyl lbt kar barkynj mhkrt flws ma la nhayyh
Let's test first word "tnzyl": t → r (t’s left is r) n → b (n’s left is b — actually on QWERTY: n’s left is b? No: QWERTY row: q w e r t y u i o p; below a s d f g h j k l; below z x c v b n m — so n's left is b? Wait, physically: b is left of n? Yes: b n m — so b left of n.) So "tnzyl": t → r n → b z → a (z's left? Actually z: left of z is nothing? Maybe wrap? But usually left on keyboard means shift left: a s d f — but z row: z x c v b n m — z’s left key is nothing; some ciphers treat it as z → / or ignore, but maybe they map to the key physically above? Not likely.) Let’s try "right shift" instead: t → y
This looks like a or code , not English. Could it be a (e
tnzyl → gamly lbt → yog kar → xne barkynj → onexlaw mhkrt → zuxeg flws → syjf ma → zn la → yn nhayyh → aunllu
So "tnzyl" → "gamly" — not English yet. Let’s do whole phrase ROT13: