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Or perhaps THM{thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr} . If you have more context (like what platform this is from, or what type of challenge), I can give a more precise solution. Otherwise, this write-up documents the attempted decoding steps and concludes that the string may already be the flag.
flag{thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr}
Check if awrj could be “flag” shifted: f→a (shift -5), l→w (shift +11) — inconsistent. thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr
Test awrj ROT13 → nje w → nje not a word. Try Atbash: a↔z, w↔d, r↔i, j↔q → zdiq no. Given thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr , if this is the flag itself, format could be flag{thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr} .
So: guzly-njew-2022-zuxe — still nonsense. thmyl starts with thm (TryHackMe). If thm is plaintext, then cipher preserves first three letters? No — thmyl → maybe thm + yl . Or perhaps THM{thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr}
Here’s a general write-up template for a Capture The Flag (CTF) challenge like thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr . Since the name seems to follow a pattern similar to TryHackMe or custom CTF naming conventions, I’ll assume it’s a or encoding challenge. Write-up: thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr Challenge Description We are given a string: thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr
t (20) + 22 = 42 mod 26 = 16 → q h (8) + 22 = 30 mod 26 = 4 → e m (13) + 22 = 35 mod 26 = 9 → j y (25) + 22 = 47 mod 26 = 21 → v l (12) + 22 = 34 mod 26 = 8 → i → qejvi — not English. thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr ROT13: thmyl → guzly awrj → nje w (nje w?) — Actually: a→n, w→j, r→e, j→w → njew mhkr → zuxe Given thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr , if this is the flag
But common trick: awrj = flag with each letter +5? f+5=k, l+5=q, a+5=f, g+5=l → kqfl — no. thmyl shift 16: t(20)+16=36 mod26=10→k h(8)+16=24→y m(13)+16=29 mod26=3→d y(25)+16=41 mod26=15→p l(12)+16=28 mod26=2→c → kydpc no. Given the time, and seeing no obvious decryption, I’d check if the answer is simply:


Or perhaps THM{thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr} . If you have more context (like what platform this is from, or what type of challenge), I can give a more precise solution. Otherwise, this write-up documents the attempted decoding steps and concludes that the string may already be the flag.
flag{thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr}
Check if awrj could be “flag” shifted: f→a (shift -5), l→w (shift +11) — inconsistent.
Test awrj ROT13 → nje w → nje not a word. Try Atbash: a↔z, w↔d, r↔i, j↔q → zdiq no. Given thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr , if this is the flag itself, format could be flag{thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr} .
So: guzly-njew-2022-zuxe — still nonsense. thmyl starts with thm (TryHackMe). If thm is plaintext, then cipher preserves first three letters? No — thmyl → maybe thm + yl .
Here’s a general write-up template for a Capture The Flag (CTF) challenge like thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr . Since the name seems to follow a pattern similar to TryHackMe or custom CTF naming conventions, I’ll assume it’s a or encoding challenge. Write-up: thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr Challenge Description We are given a string: thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr
t (20) + 22 = 42 mod 26 = 16 → q h (8) + 22 = 30 mod 26 = 4 → e m (13) + 22 = 35 mod 26 = 9 → j y (25) + 22 = 47 mod 26 = 21 → v l (12) + 22 = 34 mod 26 = 8 → i → qejvi — not English. thmyl-awrj-2022-mhkr ROT13: thmyl → guzly awrj → nje w (nje w?) — Actually: a→n, w→j, r→e, j→w → njew mhkr → zuxe
But common trick: awrj = flag with each letter +5? f+5=k, l+5=q, a+5=f, g+5=l → kqfl — no. thmyl shift 16: t(20)+16=36 mod26=10→k h(8)+16=24→y m(13)+16=29 mod26=3→d y(25)+16=41 mod26=15→p l(12)+16=28 mod26=2→c → kydpc no. Given the time, and seeing no obvious decryption, I’d check if the answer is simply:

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