Location: At the north-west edge of the central square of Heart of Elysium.

The Diary of Eurypheus was a diary written by a man named Eurypheus in Aletheia's simulation of Elysium. Its pages were later scattered throughout the region and were recovered by the Spartan misthios Kassandra.
Location: At the north-west edge of the central square of Heart of Elysium.


Location: Near the bed in the room under the Collapsed Tower viewpoint.
So much time has passed with no sign of my beloved Orphedice. She should've arrived by now! We should be holding hands in the fields, just as we did in Argolis. Maybe she's waiting for me somewhere else in Elysium. I have to leave this village to find her. The queen of the underworld might know where she is.

Location: Persephone's Akropolis near northern Wings of Hermes.
I don't understand it. The queen told me she's never met someone named Orphedice. Does this mean... No! I refuse to even entertain it. She has to be here somewhere. I'll scour every inch of this land. I'll go to the very edge of this world to be reunited with my one true love.

Location: At the southern-most point of Minos' Faith, on a picnic blanket under a cherry tree.
I've lost hope. How many times have I traveled the whole of Elysium in search of you, my Orphedice? Why aren't you here? Why can't my eyes lay upon you – even one last time? This place will never be paradise without you here. There's only one place left for me to search: at the bottom of this endless abyss...
The Diary of Eurypheus, a journal in Assassin's Creed: Odyssey's DLC The Fate of Atlantis: Fields of Elysium, seems to be loosely based on the legend of Orpheus and his wife Eurydice. The author's name is also a portmanteau of their names. The book is directly connected to entries in the Diary of Orphedice from Field of Elysium's sequel, The Fate of Atlantis: Torment of Hades