Considering that I find most weekly discussions of entertainment online insufferable, I kind of like a huge dump of episodes all at once.
Most of the time, the discourse of the weekly stuff is overly jaded, cynical, and pessimistic, with folks complaining about certain plot points that may simply be laying the groundwork for payoffs in later episodes, and a little patience could go a long way. I can't tell you how many times I'd watch an episode of some show or another, and I really enjoyed it, so decided to pop online to see what folks here and elsewhere were saying about it, and it was largely dominated by discussion about how "awful" and "dogshit" the latest episode was. To the point where I was like, "Am I watching the same show, or do I just have terrible taste in entertainment?"
I ultimately decided to just watch the shows myself, on my own time, before engaging in any discourse about it, if at all, and because of that, I prefer to be able to just watch all the episodes at once over the course of a few days, instead of waiting every week.
I'm currently waiting for Shogun and X-Men to finish their seasons before I continue watching them, just so I can sit down over the weekend and get through them all.
In either case, I don't see an issue with either full season dumps or weekly. I have no problems waiting for a full season to finish before binging the whole show, but I certainly don't mind if they opt to release the full season all at once. I'm a patient dude, and it's not like there aren't a ton of other things to watch, play, or read while I wait for a show's season to conclude.
Maybe I'm just an old man showing my age, because growing up in the 80's and 90's, I didn't mind too much the weekly wait. 1, because we didn't have much of a choice, but also because a lot of shows back then weren't really structured as over-arching narratives following a core throughline outside of a base premise. Some shows, like the X-Files, were still very episodic, even though it had a grander story stretched across multiple seasons. Most shows were "villain of the week" type affairs, where all plot threads were wrapped up in that episode, so missing an episode usually didn't mean you were missing some key event in the story (and most advertising back then would blatantly tell you "This next episode changes EVERYTHING!"
With modern shows being more serialized, and having stronger throughline plots, the wait between episodes becomes much harder, since you obviously want to know where the cliffhanger of the episode goes.
it's all subjective, and I don't think there's a right or wrong way to do it, personally. And like I said, I can wait until more episodes are out, or for the full season to be complete before watching. It's not a big deal to me either way.