The thing I don't like about reset button episodes in general are that there are no consequences left over from them. The only one that has any is
Yesterday's Enterprise in the form of Sela, which is the only reason I kind of like that episode despite the fact that it's a reset button. I also tend not to like them because it almost seems like a requirement of them that all or most of the main characters must be killed and that the ship must be destroyed in what I feel is a pretty weak attempt to milk some drama out of it.
The thing I've heard about
Twilight is that it shows us the consequences of Enterprise's mission failing. The thing is, it also shows us that "Starfleet" is only a name, that Enterprise is the only ship that has any hope of being able to avert disaster, and that Archer is the only person capable of commanding the ship if the mission is going to succeed. Both T'Pol and Trip are shown in negative light in this episode in order to make Archer the one true savior of the planet.
I won't even go into the other things that made T'Pol weaker because I've only been over it before about fifty times. But the thing is, I really didn't need to see any of it. Future Guy already laid everything out in
The Expanse and we've had at least one reminder in every episode between then and
Twilight. Since we all know that Earth is still around 100 and 200 years later, the only point of
Twilight was to showcase the VFX of the Earth getting blown up and to show Enterprise get dispatched in a kewl way, because we all knew that everything would be back the way it was at the end of the episode. So to me the episode had no point. Not only did the narration not move the story-arc forward, but none of the characters remembered any of it, so there were literally no consequences at all from this episode.