Recent observations of the fractional anomalous quantum Hall effect in
moir\'e materials have reignited the interest in fractional Chern insulators
(FCIs). The chiral limit in which analytic Landau level-like single-particle
states form an "ideal" Chern band and local interactions lead to Laughlin-like
FCIs at 1/3 filling, has been very useful for understanding these systems by
relating them to the lowest Landau level. We show, however, that, even in the
idealized chiral limit, a fluctuating quantum geometry is associated with
strongly broken symmetries and a phenomenology very different from that of
Landau levels. In particular, particle-hole symmetry is strongly violated and
e.g. at 2/3 filling an emergent interaction driven Fermi liquid state with no
Landau level counterpart is energetically favoured. In fact, even the exact
Laughlin-like zero modes at 1/3 filling have a non-uniform density tracking
the underlying quantum geometry. Moreover, by switching to a Coulomb
interaction, the ideal Chern band features charge density wave states with no
lowest Landau level counterpart.Comment: 5 pages + 4 figures, comments are welcome