I really don't know how to judge this season. Episodes 1 - 7 I could not have enjoyed more... I'd basically quibble with the execution of the Icheb death scene, and otherwise, PERFECT.
Episode 8 started to falter, but still OK.
Episode 9 and 10 I found to be a complete collapse, from a plotting standpoint. Of course, along the way there are still many moments of striking dialogue or great acting or impressive production design, but story-wise, it's a complete mess. There's so many reversals it just becomes a hash, plausibility is stretched beyond the breaking point constantly, nothing feels character-motivated any longer, all I felt was chess pieces being forced around the board to execute the pre-planned plot diagram
I'm surprised to see many commenting that Picard felt like it had too MANY episodes, when I would say it had too few. The first 7 episodes were paced correctly, then the last 3 episodes raced through 10 more episodes of story. This season was 17 episodes of story in a 10 episode bag.
I still loved "Picard", but taken all together it was an immensely frustrating viewing experience. Much like "Discovery", which I also love and am driven insane by! "Discovery" distributes it's messiness more evenly, though -- each episode is kind of great and kind of a mess. Whereas "Picard" frontloaded all it's greatness, before collapsing into sloppiness for the climax.
I think a lot of this comes from problems of scale. So far, the stakes in all three seasons of streaming Trek are ultimately the same: save all life in our entire society from complete extinction! This is such a huge mistake creatively. NOT EVERY STORY SHOULD BE THAT BIG.
For one thing, it causes you to really lose the personal stakes that are what make a story involving. This first season of "Picard" would have been stronger with all the universe-threatening stakes removed. It's much more compelling as the story of a man trying to save the lives of a small group of people, brought into this by his personal connection to his dead friend, from a group of enemies that have been so traumatized by their own loses that they have embraced bigotry against those more marginalized than they are. There's a much cleaner, more compelling metaphor there that gets lost in the "ALL LIFE IN THE UNIVERSE WILL BE EXTINGUISHED" noise.