--- Danlwd Fyltr Shkn Sayfwn-p30download Bray Andrwyd ★ No Ads

Check "andrwyd" → maybe "password" in some cipher.

"--- danlwd fyltr shkn sayfwn-p30download bray andrwyd" If "sayfwn-p30download" contains a known site name, the rest might be a simple Caesar shift: --- danlwd fyltr shkn sayfwn-p30download bray andrwyd

This appears to be a coded or obfuscated message, possibly using a substitution cipher (like a simple shift or keyboard layout shift). Check "andrwyd" → maybe "password" in some cipher

But "p30download" is readable as-is, so maybe only the other words are shifted. --- danlwd fyltr shkn sayfwn-p30download bray andrwyd

Another common one: Atbash cipher (A↔Z, B↔Y, etc.): d (4) → w (23) a (1) → z (26) — "danlwd" → "wzm..." doesn’t look like English.

But here, most likely: the person posted a disguised message pointing to a file named "sayfwn-p30download" but the rest is meaningless filler.