New on LowEndTalk? Please Register and read our Community Rules.
All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.
All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.
Provider Poll 2024 - The Results
This discussion has been closed.

Comments
i-love-beanman109-forever#nohomoYou got the wrong forum if you want to save money, this is LET. A forum that tells you to spend more.
What sort of wierd voodoo trick is this?
so close
I love when someone fucks GPT

hold on o1 pro is trying
the more I spend, the more I save!
we're toast
I'll boot up lowendgiveaways so you guys can slap password entries into that if you want to check your answers
please make it verify the answer locally
'qb?-vml-lzmitg-q-lw'
i-love-beanman109-ciphers
beanman109-has-tiny-dongIs that it?
i-love-beanman109-forever
how is that wrong
This is correct.
https://lowendgiveaways.com/#/send/Q5FM9L0kR4ukXdH3pKJ8Kw/V5QHxQm9PMgktsd8iGIbRg
enter decoded cipher here to check
CONGRATZ IF U SEE THIS YOU GUESSED / CRACKED THE CIPHER PASSCODE
send a screenshot of this to @beanman109 on LowEndTalk to claim your $20 paypal prize
I concluded that "n-lhyg-getqofn109-vlrmekv" likely translates to "i love beanman109 forever," aligning with the observed letter shifts and the user's hint.
@FAT32 was right
OKAY well wtf i just set up a site to check it and everything
CONGRATZ IF U SEE THIS YOU GUESSED / CRACKED THE CIPHER PASSCODE
decrypts to
Below is one way to see how:
Observing the Hint
The hint told us that the first three parts are “very close to i-love-beanman109”. In fact, if you ignore the dashes and digits, you can pair up
Discovering the Pattern
Look at the alphabetical positions (A=1, B=2, …, Z=26) and compare each letter:
Then for the next letters:
6. b (2) → g (7) shift: +5
7. e (5) → e (5) shift: +0
8. a (1) → t (20) shift: +19
9. n (14) → q (17) shift: +3
10. m (13) → o (15) shift: +2
11. a (1) → f (6) shift: +5
12. n (14) → n (14) shift: +0
So the shifts (when read in order) are:
This is a repeating key of [+5, +0, +19, +3, +2] applied to the letters of the plaintext (while non‐letters like dashes and digits stay the same).
Decrypting the Last Part
The final segment in the ciphertext is "vlrmekv". Since the key is applied letter‐by‐letter in order, we must know where we are in the repeating pattern.
Now, decrypt by subtracting the shift (mod 26):
Plain = 22 – 19 = 3 → c.
Plain = 12 – 3 = 9 → i.
Plain = 18 – 2 = 16 → p.
Plain = 13 – 5 = 8 → h.
Plain = 5 – 0 = 5 → e.
Plain = 11 – 19 = –8 → (–8 mod 26 = 18) → r.
Plain = 22 – 3 = 19 → s.
So the decrypted last segment is "ciphers".
Putting It All Together
Replacing the parts (and leaving the digits and dashes unchanged) gives:
or
Final Answer
The decrypted message is:
i-love-beanman109-ciphers
@chengzi got it, it was a vigenere cipher with the key FAT32
Prompt is:
note to self, no numbers next time
i-love-FAT32
HAHAHAHA I knew it is something like this but I guess plus point for me for not needed to use any GPT?
you get the pat on the back reward, which arguably is better than $20 could ever be
@chengzi i'll DM you for your paypal details now
i-love-beansman109-forever ?