mbp gba xoic xowo nhib zoo dgnzyi Again, no obvious plaintext emerges. Given the short length (30 letters) a full substitution solution is under‑determined, but we can still look for patterns:
Applying this partial key (b→e, r→t, y→a, l→l, k→h, n→s) yields:
| Shift | Plaintext | |-------|-----------| | +1 | ozl uza lc zs cmez ntsz bmmc xu bmncs c | | +5 | sdo yed qg fu hqcd rwx eqqg aqrgt g | | -3 | kwh qwv hxu yia iop vii ysi y... |
No shift yielded intelligible words, so a simple Caesar cipher is . 3.2 Atbash (reverse alphabet) Applying the Atbash substitution (A↔Z, B↔Y, …) gives: