Danlwd Fylm Lion 2016 Bdwn Sanswr Ba Zyrnwys Chsbydh Here
d(4) → w(23) a(1) → z(26) n(14) → m(13) l(12) → o(15) w(23) → d(4) d(4) → w(23) → "w z m o d w" → "wzmodw"? Actually string: w z m o d w → "wzmodw"? No spaces: "wzmodw" — not clear.
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Z Y X W V U T S R Q P O N M L K J I H G F E D C B A danlwd fylm lion 2016 bdwn sanswr ba zyrnwys chsbydh
Better approach — this looks like a (each letter shifted to adjacent key on QWERTY). For example: d→s (left), a→s? Not consistent. d(4) → w(23) a(1) → z(26) n(14) →
But given the phrase includes "lion 2016" (likely the film The Lion from 2016, i.e., The Lion King or just Lion starring Dev Patel), and "bdwn" might be "down", "sanswr" might be "answer", "ba" might be "to/be", "zyrnwys" → "cyrnwys"? Wait — let me try a (common for simple obfuscation): A B C D E F G H
If you intended this as a test or a riddle, please provide the cipher method. Otherwise, I can only say: the string appears to be an encoded version of an English phrase related to the 2016 film (starring Dev Patel) and words like "down", "answer", "to", "cyrnwys" (possibly "cyrnwys" = "cry news"?).
Given the time, the most likely is (A↔Z, B↔Y…). Let me apply Atbash to full phrase: