I've said this before and I'm sure I'll say it again, but outside of the D- writing for these shows, the weird structure that Favreau & co established from the jump - one that isn't suited for weekly, episodic TV - is what unfortunately set the tone and I'm afraid set all this stuff down such a bad path.
Think about your favorite TV series over the years and I'd be willing to bet that the vast majority of them follow MULTIPLE characters/storylines, that center around the same, broad, overarching plot, and constantly cut between those characters/storylines to tell the bigger picture. This is TV 101 type stuff, that everything from run-of-the-mill broadcast/network fare to Better Call Saul and Succession adheres to. Because it's more propulsive, because it offers more variety, because it's necessary to be able to leave scenes on certain beats, cut to something else for a bit, and then come back. In other words, because it works.
Yet, for the most part, Mando, BOBF, and now Kenobi each basically follow ONE primary character/storyline, with ONE goal, and we hardly ever cut away from that character/goal to something else going on. Yes, once in a blue moon we'll check in on the villains for a quick scene or two, but that's about it. Otherwise, it all just feels so claustrophobic, and so maddening.
All of this is a long way of saying that's one of the reasons I'm excited for Andor. I watch that trailer and I see MULTIPLE storylines and MULTIPLE characters of interest that we'll constantly be cutting back and forth from, all weaving together to tell a larger story. As TV should be.
That, and no one creatively, from the previous three series, is involved with Andor (even Kenobi director Deborah Chow worked on a few Mando episodes). We'll see how Ahsoka shakes out, but considering it was born out of the first two SW series (in terms of live action, anyway), I'm afraid it's just going to be more of the same - one central character, one goal, never cutting to anything else - but I would absolutely love to be proven wrong.