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That's what I realized as Picard and the entire TNG crew stepped onto the bridge of the Enterprise -D in all its perfectly restored glory. The plot doesn't really matter. The blatant manipulation in triggering the memories of my youth doesn't really matter.
Spreading the Vadic storyline out over eight episodes to get to this point doesn't really matter. What matters is giving this crew an adventure to enable its proper sendoff, and doing it in the most nostalgic way possible. It's all been building to this payoff, which you might call " Relics II.
In a way, it's like a much better version of Picard season one, where we had a bunch of plot that didn't much matter when, emotionally, the entire season came down to a conversation between Picard and Data. Okay, yes, the season-long story actually does matter on the broader objective scale and we'll get to that in a second , but it's not the point of the closing moment of "Vox" — and the point of "Vox" and the season at large is really to get us to this moment and moments like it.
It's a moment that's well worth it and wonderfully pulled off. I damn near teared up as the crew stepped onto that bridge, and it slowly lit up like a museum display, and they spoke about how right it felt to be there.