I'll admit, at the time Day of the Doctor aired, I was bothered and even a bit offended that the destruction of Gallifrey was undone. At the time, I was dealing with a recent death in the family that I was having some trouble with. And this, honestly felt like the message Moffat was sending was "pain and loss are so uncool. Everybody lives!" Which if anything, is a pretty horrible message to send. Pain and loss does suck, but it is something everyone has to deal with, and most of the times it doesn't get undone. And so, to have it undone so here, was rather unsettling to say the least.
I'll admit, I'm not against the Time Lords having a place on the show, indeed many of their classic era appearances are favourites of mine. However, since RTD established the Time Lords were gone, I've always viewed it as the Doctor's darkest regret. The one thing in his past he's most ashamed of that can't be undone and will forever haunt him. But instead, we get that wiped clean in Day of the Doctor, which honestly, was a mistake. Doctor Who has a large children audience, and indeed Moffat even stated he believed the show to be a children's show. Something like the Doctor's grief over the loss of the Time Lords could help children and adults alike deal with the inevitable losses which will come in their own lives. Undoing that only really provides a cheap feel good moment, and in the long run does more damage since it sends the message that the only way to deal with loss it to arrange to have it undone, which is impossible in the majority of losses everyone experiences.
This is the primary problem I had with Moffat's near refusal to kill characters in his scripts, or when he does kill characters he brings them back. It's even worse when he brings back dead characters and never revisits them after they were brought back, like with the Paternoster Gang or Osgood, or even the Time Lords themselves.
I'll admit, I'm not against the Time Lords having a place on the show, indeed many of their classic era appearances are favourites of mine. However, since RTD established the Time Lords were gone, I've always viewed it as the Doctor's darkest regret. The one thing in his past he's most ashamed of that can't be undone and will forever haunt him. But instead, we get that wiped clean in Day of the Doctor, which honestly, was a mistake. Doctor Who has a large children audience, and indeed Moffat even stated he believed the show to be a children's show. Something like the Doctor's grief over the loss of the Time Lords could help children and adults alike deal with the inevitable losses which will come in their own lives. Undoing that only really provides a cheap feel good moment, and in the long run does more damage since it sends the message that the only way to deal with loss it to arrange to have it undone, which is impossible in the majority of losses everyone experiences.
This is the primary problem I had with Moffat's near refusal to kill characters in his scripts, or when he does kill characters he brings them back. It's even worse when he brings back dead characters and never revisits them after they were brought back, like with the Paternoster Gang or Osgood, or even the Time Lords themselves.