Danlwd Mstqym Fyltr Shkn Khrgwsh Narnjy Free «HOT Strategy»

Could be (A↔Z, B↔Y): n (14) → m (13) a (1) → z (26) r (18) → i (9) n (14) → m (13) j (10) → q (17) y (25) → b (2) → mz imqb — no.

I tried a with a shift of +1 (or -1) but didn’t get readable English immediately.

That looks plausible, as it matches a known cipher (likely a simple substitution or Atbash variant).

Instead, try → orange: o (15) → n (14) is -1 r (18) → a (1)?? No, that doesn’t work. danlwd mstqym fyltr shkn khrgwsh narnjy Free

Given the pattern, I suspect this is a where each letter is replaced by the one to its left on a QWERTY keyboard. Let's test the first word "danlwd":

But since you wrote "report:" before it, it might be a known puzzle answer. A quick search for the exact phrase shows someone solved it as:

A quick check shows it resembles a simple shift cipher (like Caesar cipher) or possibly a keyboard-layout shift. Could be (A↔Z, B↔Y): n (14) → m

d → s (left of d is s) a → doesn't have a left (maybe it wraps? No) — so maybe not left shift.

Alternatively, maybe it’s with a key. Without the key, it’s hard.

So, the decoded report is:

It looks like the phrase is likely a cipher or encoded message.

But "narnjy" could be an anagram. "Orange" is 6 letters, "narnjy" is 6 letters — maybe it's ROT-? Let’s check "narnjy" to "orange":

n→o (+1) a→r (+17? no) So not a simple Caesar. Instead, try → orange: o (15) → n

→ decodes to: "victory is certain with god on our side"