That's true. I was trying to get at the idea that you could have a bad product or sequel because someone didn't do their homework and messed up the characters and the essence of the franchise.
Yeah, but the thing is, unless you have behind-the-scenes insight, you're just guessing as to the reasons
why something didn't work. You have no way of knowing whether the creators really didn't research the source material, or whether they knew it like the back of their hand, tried to reinvent it in a fresh way, and did a poor job of it. All you see is the result; you don't know what led to it.
In my experience, audiences are really bad at guessing how much knowledge the creators of one thing had of another thing. For instance, if they see some superficial resemblance between New Thing A and Slightly Older Thing B, they'll immediately say "Oh, the makers of New Thing A were obviously ripping off Slightly Older Thing B." But usually, if the makers of NTA had been aware of SOTB, then they would've changed NTA to resemble it
less, to avoid exactly such accusations. The reason for the resemblance is that they
didn't know about the earlier work. So audiences assume they had knowledge that they actually lacked. So why should the audience's assumption that they
lacked knowledge of an earlier thing be any more trustworthy?
We've not had a situation where the entire premise of two spin-offs is rendered ridiculous because the latest one has retconned a means to cross any distance in an instant into the continuity.
You keep ignoring the fact that the ultimate abandonment of spore drive is already built into the premise, no differently than with the soliton wave in "New Ground," transwarp in "Threshold," etc. It's just one more of the many revolutionary-but-fatally-flawed new technologies in Trek that get briefly tried and then forgotten. The only difference is that it's taking more than a single episode for it to be abandoned, and that's only because TV today is more arc-based so plot points take longer to resolve. But it's been made crystal clear that it can't be used safely or ethically over the long haul. It's basically a rehash of
Voyager: "Equinox," where the
Equinox crew developed a really fast FTL drive but it turned out to require murdering sentient life forms so it was never used again.
When watching a serialised show mostly aimed at a mature audience of established Trekkies in 2019, one expects better than the continuity of a 1960's television show which existed before home video, and was almost an anthology by comparison.
And there you go making the same lazy assumption that continuity and quality are equivalent. Continuity is a
choice. It's one tool in the kit. Yes, we now have the means to research nitpicky continuity details more effectively and easily, but that doesn't make them more
important than they used to be. Continuity is still just a means to the end of telling a story. It is not the only thing that matters.