You no doubt know this, but the character of Q was based on Trelene from the TOS episode, "The Squire of Gothos." I don't have a problem with Q's sense of humor or playfulness since why should we assume that all superior beings would be solemn? It seems reasonable that if beings were omnipotent in a fudged-up Universe, they'd have some fun with weaker denizens, such as humans.
But Q didn't belong in the debut episode of TNG since the purpose of a pilot is to establish the characters and tell an interesting story. D.C. Fontana's script for "Encounter at Farpoint" did this, but the studio pressured Roddenberry to make it a double episode, so he forced the Q story into it, which didn't fit Fontana's screenplay and was a premature introduction for Q.
By contrast, Trelene's introduction on TOS (his only episode) wasn’t until the second half of the 1st Season when the serious tone of the series was well established. Plus Trelane was presented in a believable manner despite his goofy antics. It's called good writing. In "Encounter at Farpoint," however, it's not 8 minutes into the story — the premiere episode of the series — and this goofball character suddenly appears on the Bridge and proceeds to instantaneously kidnap the Bridge crew, taking them to some bizarre trial in the midst of a bunch of uncouth barbarians. This entire sequence takes place in the first half hour of the pilot and it just mars the seriousness and credible-ness of the rest of the episode and wasn't a good sign for the series.
Q's next appearance on TNG was in "Hide and Q," which sucked, not because of Q or John de Lancie, but because the screenplay & execution were lousy (it's very similar to TOS' second pilot -- "Where No Man Has Gone Before" -- just lacking the excellence).
Of course Q went on to become a quality side character in TNG and he was key to some great stories or, at least, very entertaining ones, like "Q Who?," "Deja Q," "Tapestry" and "All Good Things..."
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