"In all of the universe, you're the closest thing I have to a friend, Jean-Luc."
Alright, I cried. Seriously, I'm starting to feel something in my eye just at hearing that above line in John de Lancie's voice, even though everything was different back then when he said it. It was a beautiful swan song for Q. And I want a Picard/Laris endgame, dammit. I never really cared for the whole Picard/Crusher pairing, and throwing out the stellar chemistry Stewart and Brady have consistently had for two years just because the idea of Picard/Crusher is an established part of the Fandom's groupthink seems to be a total waste for me. But I have no illusions, because I've learned in the last five years that fanwank always wins out in the end.
That being said, now that I've managed to get through the last two episodes in one afternoon, I'm not as mad about the TNG reunion we're getting next season and I think I can make peace with the endings Jurati and Rios got, and quite frankly, while I like Elnor, they didn't flesh him out enough to make his absence carry much weight for me. Keeping Raffi for the next season because of her connections to the two legacy characters staying in the main cast makes perfect sense.
I enjoyed the handful of posts in this thread describing how all the seemingly random events could all be tied together into a coherent plot by Q: he needed a group of Borg tempered by Jurati's compassion to cooperate with the Federation to stop the anomaly, and because he was dying, he also wanted to help Picard let go of his repressed pain as a parting gift. He brought the crew to the Confederation timeline specifically because he needed a Borg Queen that was disconnected from the Collective so that she would merge with Jurati instead of just assimilating her. However, because he was dying, he expended most of his power bringing the crew into the alternate timeline, and he was forced to go through with his plan in a roundabout way, manipulating Soong and Renée to create a chain of events that would force Tallinn into action, leading to Picard's injury and subsequent epiphany. Tallinn being given the chance to meet Renée and the liberation of Kore were just small moments of compassion for him, deciding to do some good things with the limited time he had left, culminating in him resurrecting Elnor with the small bit of energy originally intended to bring Rios back to the future. He truly shined as a bona fide Trickster Mentor for me throughout this last lesson of his. The only thing that would've made me like it better would've been Picard recapping this as he's putting the puzzle together like he did in the eighth episode of the last season.
"Must it always have galactic import? Universal stakes? Celestial upheaval? Isn't one life enough?" - I chuckled at that line, it was definitely intended for (a certain part of) the viewers.