Talk:Nature spirit

I'm not sure if Nendawen is a primal spirit or an archfey because in the Chosen of Nendawen trilogy "The Hunter" (with Nendawen as one incarnation) is described as a "primal" entity, but apparently he resides in the Feywild or at least has a strong connection to it. Furthermore, it is stated that he can only come to Toril on special occasions. My impression is that primal spirits and archfey aren't distinguished properly in the novels (or anywhere else). This leads to the question: Does "primal" actually mean "from the prime material plane" or does it simply mean "ancient"? Thoughts? --Neshen (talk) 20:10, July 3, 2015 (UTC)


 * I don't know anything about the Moonshaes, but Nobanion (in Powers & Pantheons) and Remnis and Quorlinn (in Monster Mythology and On Hallowed Ground) are considered proper deities from the Beastlands. So I think they may be tied to the world, but primal does not mean "from the prime material plane" here. (Except if the "primal" concept here is meant to supersede 2nd Edition information.) Daranios (talk) 06:40, July 4, 2015 (UTC)

Rename and Expansion
I propose to rename this article as "Nature spirit" and include "primal spirit" as redirect. It will include information about the various types of nature/primal spirits.

Opening sentence would start: "Nature spirits aka primal spirits..."

Subsections include:

===Nature Spirits (Kara-Tur)===

===Place Spirits===

===Nine Trickster Gods===

===Notable Nature Spirits===

Dragon magazine 376 Refers to nature spirits and primal spirits fairly interchangeably. The description of nature spirits and in part primal spirits very much align with the description of place spirits.

I also plan on renaming the existing Nature spirit article to Nature spirit (Kara-Tur), with approval from that article's author.

Please feel free to offer any input before I make this change. Ruf (talk) 12:08, 30 September 2022 (UTC)