And you reached this conclusion... before watching the JJ movies, or in tandem with the certainty that it wouldn't be necessary for you to watch them at all? The broad-brush dismissals make it difficult to tell which of those two it was, but the dull ring of "final draft of review written in advance of viewing" is pretty unmistakable.
I went into the first one with an open mind, as I enjoyed J.J's previous work. I had barely an issue with the alternate timeline, only except that it was not Trek tradition to diverge from continuity. I thought the acting was okay, and it was a fun movie. I lamented that in timeline hopping they couldn't find a way to have Shatner in there with Nimoy, huge missed opportunity as far as I'm concerned. In any event, again, Pine, Quinto, Saldana, very good. The rest of the cast leaves some to be desired. Urban's Bones was terrible though I love him in The Boys. Pegg's Scotty is too divergent but whatever, he's an actor I enjoy. Into Darkness was really bad. Cumberbach's Khan was an insult to Montelban. Beyond was definitely a welcomed "return to normalcy," however, especially after Kurtzman returned Trek to the "small screen," I just don't see a point of continuing this movie franchise. The OP question was do you want to see it continue, and my strong inclination is no......
HOWEVER, as a lifelong devotee of Quentin Tarantino, that would be the lone exception! His take would be such a vast departure it would be worth it, although I don't think he'll ever have the chance to do it.
And the previous movies were not full of effects and bad jokes? Have you even seen them?
TOS Movies were pretty light on effects other than TMP which many people hated, and the jokes in it were GOOD jokes.
Jim finding direction and purpose in life, Spock dealing with bigotry and coming to accept himself as an emotional half-human... did you miss these? Or Into Darkness condemning drone warfare, and Spock learning the value of friendship?
I wonder how much of classic Trek would hold up for you, if you were coming to it today.
I probably did miss them because I have only seen each of them once in theaters, with no interest in rewatching. Plus I've seen all you mention already, in the 1966 TV show. Rehashing characters a 2nd time around just doesn't appeal to me. Not to mention that J.J.'s film-making has gotten progressively unbearable to me. His Star Wars movies, while exciting the first time through, are just littered with problems that make rewatches very tough.