I mean, if what you're looking for is good basketball, this season was always going to be a drag. Nothing about this team's off-season acquisitions suggested that the Kings were going to become watchable all of a sudden, particularly with a deeply uninspiring coaching staff in tow. So a calibration of expectation is necessary for the fans, if it wasn't already. The on-court product is abysmal, but shedding veteran contracts, getting younger guys more minutes, and positioning for the 2026 draft is the order of each and every day.
Add a Dybantsa or a Peterson or a Boozer or a Wilson or a Fleming to a theoretical core of Murray/Raynaud/Clifford/Ellis/Carter/Cardwell, and you don't yet have a competitive NBA team, but you do have a considerably more watchable product that would be worth rooting for, and a brighter future with the potential for building further through the draft, especially if you eventually hire a more effective and more modern NBA coaching staff to guide whatever young talent you're able to collect.
It's really not that complicated, since all it involves is losing a lot of games (which already comes naturally to this iteration of the Kings), getting rid of veteran deadweight, and utilizing your own existing draft picks, something any halfway competent franchise should be able to pull off. But we'll see if this franchise manages to Kangz things up anyway.