Yaarel
🇮🇱 🇺🇦 He-Mage
I think the difference is, the Feywild is not the same thing as reallife traditions about Jotunheimr, Alfheimr, the Faerie, and so on.
The D&D Feywild is more like an Elemental Plane of Plant, disconnected, and having nothing to do with the Material Plane. Thus the Feywild is irrelevant to nature.
By contrast, in the reallife traditions, the animistic regions are our material world. When one walks past Jotnar or Faeriefolk, they can see you, and a shaman with the Sight can see them. Animistic spirits ARE nature. They are the cliff, they are fertile land. They are not somewhere else in a separate plane. These natural features exist among us. And when the mind of a feature is itself a shaman, the feature can project its mind out from the feature to manifest elsewhere and influence elsewhere.
Thus, animistic regions are not some ideal version of nature. They are the same nature we see. When we see a barren landscape with a curious patch overgrown with plants, we know faeriefolk live there, being the fertile land where the plants are.
The D&D Feywild is more like an Elemental Plane of Plant, disconnected, and having nothing to do with the Material Plane. Thus the Feywild is irrelevant to nature.
By contrast, in the reallife traditions, the animistic regions are our material world. When one walks past Jotnar or Faeriefolk, they can see you, and a shaman with the Sight can see them. Animistic spirits ARE nature. They are the cliff, they are fertile land. They are not somewhere else in a separate plane. These natural features exist among us. And when the mind of a feature is itself a shaman, the feature can project its mind out from the feature to manifest elsewhere and influence elsewhere.
Thus, animistic regions are not some ideal version of nature. They are the same nature we see. When we see a barren landscape with a curious patch overgrown with plants, we know faeriefolk live there, being the fertile land where the plants are.