What does /x/ think of my cipher? It's somewhat simple, each character has it's own pronunciation as well but I don't know where to proceed with that exactly. Maybe I could also turn it into a numerical system when vocalized? I made this in HS so nobody could read my diary and now I feel as if it's more deserving of occult purposes. Any thoughts/ideas?
>>18908463
It lacks originality. I've been making ciphers and scripts for 8 years now and I've noticed most people make the same basic glyphs and never put much thought into it. C-
Already deciphered your cipher. 2/10
>>18908674
>>18908674
How complex would it need to be for it to be (for the most part) completely indecipherable to the average person yet easy to mildly difficult for an entry-level/adept individual? How can I increase my skill in creating ciphers? What shapes/designs should I avoid?
>>18908682
I mean, I put the key there along with "the quick brown fox" and "Lorem ipsum". I just wanted opinions on how it looks.
>>18908700
A simple thing you could do if you have any linguistic knowledge, is the create a language either from scratch, or by making an English cipher language with very different phonologies. Then creating glyphs for that language. So even if someone somehow deciphered the glyphs, they would still have no idea what it meant.
>>18908700
As far as what designs to avoid, what I meant was that every seems to use the boxy, alien-ish/zodiac killer looking symbols. That's all just easy amateur stuff. For just starting out, I'd recommend looking into Tolkiens scripts, there are many.
>>18908463
It looks a lot like my cypher.