Cryptogram
A cryptogram is a type of puzzle in which a plaintext message is transformed by a substitution cipher so that each letter is replaced by another letter, resulting in ciphertext. In standard cryptograms used for puzzles, spaces and punctuation are preserved, and the solver must recover the original text by determining the letter mapping. The typical form uses a monoalphabetic substitution: a fixed one-to-one mapping between the 26 letters of the alphabet.
Variants include puzzles that replace letters with digits or symbols, but still follow a single fixed key.
Solving methods emphasize analysis of language structure and letter patterns. Frequency analysis helps identify common letters,
History and usage: Cryptograms have long been part of recreational cryptography, education, and puzzle culture. They