I did a TNG marathon of episodes, two of which I abandoned. None of them were new to me, but I've been netflix watching. I cannot recall the particular order.
"Inheritance", which is a good episode.
"Force of Nature", which I gave up on because it is weak and the idea that warp is destroying space basically undercuts Star Trek's fundamental ability to tell stories. It's like telling characters walking from scene A to B is slowly breaking their legs. Then no one walks from scene A to scene B, or we have to analyze walking from scene A to scene B when we do not care to, or the story beings to ignore the danger of walking from scene A to scene B which undercuts the dramatic idea of the entire thing. Might as well just not have it be an element.
"Sub Rosa", which I gave up on because I got tired of the harlequin romance plot masquerading as Star Trek. I don't care to see anyone's passionate lust. Have the camera drift to an open window blowing a curtain, fade to black, and have some alien do something interesting, please. Love is a better story element than lust, as Picard's brief love with science lady showed some episodes prior. It has meaning and depth. It has character. The audience cares when the characters care. "Sub Rosa" was empty.
"Pegasus", which is decent if not my favorite episode. Again, like "Force of Nature", it is a last season episode that seeks to fundamentally shift things we are used to in a way which could totally alter things. In this case, Riker. It feels too late in the game to do that, and they did not do it in as bold a step as getting rid of Riker in a court martial. "Inheritance" did the idea of expanding the character better. It did not shift our idea of them, but it expanded on them and fleshed them out. Like "Force of Nature" it sets up something which should linger with the audience as a thing from now on, which is dropped from view when the episode ends.
"Parallels", which I love. Not much more to say.