I need your autism powers to decode this message. It's from an irl girl - we're racing each other to see who figures out the other's message first. I've been stuck on it all weekend.
TNUROHECDSIIHEOSSHRLOMATV
-It does translate to English -It does translate to something intelligible and not a bunch of gibberish.
We've been sending each other codes. She started the whole thing. why fuck me tho :( I'm new to Sup Forums, what's /x/?
Bentley Murphy
>decode this message. It's from an irl girl
"Jet fuel can't melt steel beams"
Isaiah Robinson
Try T = D and I = L and see if something jumps out at you. And forget That's not even close.
Alexander Powell
Maybe try to find a word that fits in the end. Its just 4 letter and it is some how related with this riddle. "To see this .... code and text were my first bets but don't fit with the previious decoding.
James Taylor
/x/ is paranormal stuff
Tyler Nguyen
tnuH STOc dELL TO SEE THIS matv So far I suppose
Luis Diaz
>not even close Its a meme, you dip
Carter Hill
look like vigerne code to me, but then you will need a codeword.
Find the most commonly-used letter, set the cipher-wheel so that that letter matches with E. If it doesn't work, next try N, T, S.
Logan Myers
Nevermind. It's not a Caesar Cipher.
Christian Jenkins
The message isn't necessarily that number of characters.
Ian Gutierrez
Did you try just putting each letter on a square of paper and manipulating them to make words?
It may be that simple. Alternatively, make a full set of a-z for each unique letter and just brute force it, then check different forms of ciphers to see if any of them work.
Dylan Bennett
'Be sure to drink your Ovaltine'
Elijah Thompson
OP here. Sorry, should have clarified. Anything other than the main text string are my own shitty attempts at solving it. the up down hours were a reference for a solution I tried, which didn't work.
Dylan Hill
Ooh, ooh, I have an idea. Arrange the words like a crossword; any letters that are the same in multiple words cross over each other, so you get realtime updates on whether each instance of a letter makes sense. Once you figure out a word for certain, you can easily extrapolate out the rest of the words based on the overlap.
Any cipherfags know of a real technique like this?
Samuel Johnson
>it's her number >we all have her number now
Grayson Smith
Honestly can't think of a way to solve this. No key to relate to anything so it's just trying to blindly look for random methods.
David Long
What if it's her BTC hash? That would be mighty nice.
Tyler Rogers
The arrows up and down correspond to whether you should go up or down one letter in the alphabet. Thank me later
Ian Ward
I posted two visual methods, that I would use if I wanted to do it for you. I really think that creating squares of paper and manipulating them is the simplest way to go about it beyond finding a codebreaker on the web