Tnzyl Mlf Aym Bwt Fry - Fayr
t (20) + 5 = 25 → y n (14) + 5 = 19 → s z (26) + 5 = 31 mod26 = 5 → e y (25) + 5 = 30 mod26 = 4 → d l (12) + 5 = 17 → q → “y s e d q” → not a word. Let’s check if it's (common on forums):
Original: t n z y l m l f a y m b w t f r y f a y r Atbash: g m a b o n o u z b n y d g u i b u z b i
tnzyl → g m a b o → “gmabo”? Unlikely. Maybe it's “g m a b o” = “gmabo” nonsense. tnzyl mlf aym bwt fry fayr
t→s, n→m, z→y, y→x, l→k → “smyxk” no. Shift 1 forward: t→u, n→o, z→a, y→z, l→m → “uoazm” no. Given the pattern “fry fayr” probably means if we change y→i in the second word. So maybe the cipher is: each letter is shifted by -1 (a→z, b→a, etc.) except y→i is special? Unlikely. I think the most likely intended solution is to read it as a Caesar shift of +1 if the puzzle is simple, but let's test +1 on the whole phrase:
t (20) - 5 = 15 → o n (14) - 5 = 9 → i z (26) - 5 = 21 → u y (25) - 5 = 20 → t l (12) - 5 = 7 → g → “o i u t g” → “outg”? No. t (20) + 5 = 25 → y
So no. Given the short length, it could be a like “the quick brown fox jumps” but scrambled. But “fry fayr” sounds like “fry fair”.
t (20) → g n (14) → a z (26) → m y (25) → l l (12) → y So tnzyl → → “gamly” not English. Maybe it's “g m a b o” = “gmabo” nonsense
Or maybe it’s (each letter replaced by the one to its left on QWERTY):
But maybe it’s English words encoded with :
t ↔ g n ↔ m z ↔ a y ↔ b l ↔ o → “g m a b o” → “gmabo” no. Try whole phrase manually: