Danlwd Wy Py An Bayw Bayw · Working & Updated

Could it be “please do … paper”? No.

Test bayw : b → v? No. But danlwd maybe m something? Try d left on QWERTY: d→s, a→ nothing, hmm.

But if you just need the plaintext and the cipher is ROT13? ROT13(danlwd) = qnayjq — nonsense. So not ROT13.

I suspect it’s actually a on QWERTY: take each letter, shift to the next key to the right? b→n, a→s, y→u, w→e — nsue, no. Conclusion: bayw to paper by what cipher? Possibly mirror (reverse, then shift back by 1 in alphabet): danlwd wy py an bayw bayw

The phrase "danlwd wy py an bayw bayw" — the word "paper" at the end suggests the cipher might be shifting letters.

This looks like a simple cipher. Let me check the pattern.

Let’s try reverse: paper = bayw .

Let’s try with a shift:

If "paper" = "bayw" (last word), then: b → p is a shift of +14 (or -12). a → a (that doesn't fit—so maybe not a consistent Caesar shift on the whole word).

But maybe it’s a simple shift per letter: b→p (+14), a→a (+0), y→e (-16 or +10?), w→r (-5) — inconsistent. Could it be “please do … paper”

Given the time, and that you explicitly gave the word “paper” at the end as the solution for bayw , the likely answer is that the entire cipher maps to a known phrase, but for your query , it appears you’re telling me that “paper” is the translation of the last two words.

Given the puzzle and the provided hint paper for bayw bayw , the simplest answer is that the phrase means: decodes to: "We need to submit the paper paper" — but unclear. If you want, I can fully brute-force decode it if you give me the cipher method, or confirm if it's a known puzzle phrase.