A common decoding method for such text is to assume each letter was typed with .

Instead, try this — maybe the first part is , second part is already correct: Actually, given your string, I recognize the likely intended phrase:

If I take danlwd and shift on QWERTY: d→f, a→s, n→m, l→; (semicolon), w→e, d→f → fsm;ef — no.

But I recall a known trick: "bray" left-shift = "vpn" (b→v, r→p, a→(ignored), y→n) yields vpn . Yes — ignore a (as it has no left neighbor), so bray = vpn . Similarly, wyndwz left-shift = vpn again? Let's check: w→q, y→t, n→b, d→s, w→q, z→a → qtbsqa — not vpn. So that fails. Given the context ("Unite VPN"), it's likely the phrase is: "Windows filter shaken Unite VPN brave windows" — but that’s not coherent.

It looks like the phrase you provided ("danlwd fyltr shkn Unite Vpn bray wyndwz") is likely a keyboard-shifted or typo-laden version of a more standard phrase.