d (right) → f a → s n → m l → ; (punctuation, unlikely) — so maybe .
The phrase you provided — — looks like a keyboard-shifted cipher (each letter is shifted on a QWERTY keyboard, often by one key in a certain direction).
But "Shenzo" is clearly a name like "Shenzo" — maybe "Shenzo" is "Shenzo" but "Vpn" is actually "Vpn" (real abbreviation). Then "bray" → "bray" (like donkey sound). "wyndwz" — looks like "windows" if shifted: w→w, y→i, n→n, d→d, w→o, z→s → "windos" close to "windows". danlwd Shenzo Vpn bray wyndwz
Let’s try on QWERTY:
Apply to : d → f a → s n → m l → ; (but that seems odd) w → e d → f → "fsm;ef" — doesn’t look English. So no. d (right) → f a → s n
Given the look: "danlwd" could be "Daniel" if shifted: d→d (no), a→a (no), n→n (no) — not working.
Hold — Maybe it's but on a different row? Then "bray" → "bray" (like donkey sound)
d → s a → (nothing, skip or ? — but maybe it's a word boundary? Treat as 'a' left would be ' or caps — but maybe the cipher actually uses for whole phrase.)
Now apply to (all lowercase):
— though "bray" remains odd (bray = donkey sound). Possibly "bray" is a typo or code for "break" or "bypass".