I only really actually liked Andor, overall -- the others were kinda half-assed (except for Mando) in terms of the actual skills of the people making the series. (But Gilroy has experience with film and TV.)
Ahsoka wasn't terrible, but it's pretty telling when the most interesting people on your show are the "grey Force users" or whatever they might have been and I wish they had made a show about them. Lots of fan service. Nothing terribly exciting, even if the actors weren't bad. I'll just note I never liked Christensen as Anakin, really; and so having all the Anakin apologetics in this show + even more Christensen where I'm supposed to be glomming on him simply for being there just was ridiculous and annoying.
I did think out of everything, Mando was the most "Star Wars" Star Wars show out there, but it never much appealed to me. I think the only time I really sat up in my seat was in S2E7 when Bill Barr does something drastic that is the bread-and-butter of truly interesting shows (because it felt like what his character should do but suddenly disrupted the safety of the main characters)... and then it just went back to meh again and "oh look another cute Disney cameo." Again it's telling that I can quote you the exact episode that happened in without having watched Mando twice or since. (I never watched Season 3.)
Kenobi's "Leia" antics didn't bother me as much as they bothered you, but after an okay opener, it just went downhill again and just had so much stupid stuff. Yes, there's a half decent fight at the end -- but I don't understand why Vader was allowed to live. It had to be written in a way that Kenobi wasn't able to kill him or didn't want to, but frankly Vader was a universal menace that needed to be terminated. These series are typically either missing the balls to do what must be done or the skill to pull it off.
I rewatched S1E5 of "The Acolyte" last night just to be fair. I know it was one of the better episodes I had seen and I actually enjoyed it on the second time through too. The fights were decent and interesting, and more fights meant less dialogue. But most importantly now knowing the entire backstory, I could interpret what was being said and had perspective. On first watch, they all seem to be needlessly talking "around" things instead of just saying it, and a lot of the dialogue is confusing. Once you know the backstory, a lot of the comments in dialogue make sense -- but that's not really how to make a series. You have to hear it like your audience would hear it the first time, with only past episodes to provide information, and it's a lot of needless "Not gonna tell you what's going on" crap, because they're withholding info for reveals in episode 6-7 (?).