Re-numbering is not inherently bad. Marvel long ago discarded legacy numbering. They typically re-number by run, when creative teams change. Each run is effectivcely a mini-series. With Marvel, each re-numbering is a change in tone and direction. In other words, there is a plan.Yeah, I know they used to be quite a thing to see, but the name now means "Crisis on Infinite Reboots", and cramming 75 years of Batman stories into 5 years of in-universe realigned retellings, and #1s over and over.
(Even changes to plans are handled pretty well. By the end of "Time Runs Out", Marvel had "forgotten" that "Age of Ultron" was supposed to lead in to the reboot. But, Hickman's run is still mostly coherent.)
DC lacks any coherent plans. (Consider how quickly they changed direction with "Convergence", which was only meant to be a place holder. Then there was no follow-up for several months.)
"Earth 2" and "Team 7" are examples of this.
With "Earth 2", DC ran Robinson off mid-run. Taylor replaced Robinson almost seamlessly, until he could not work from Robinson's work. DC apparently wanted "Earth 2" to be a rolling disaster. Then, Taylor went to Marvel (mid-run on "Earth 2") just as DC decided to draw the series in to a big event, which may or may not have been intended to lead in to "Convergence". Now, "Earth 2: Society" has barely gotten out of set-up, and has a new writer. The only reason I am assuming DC has any intention of keeping the series around in the long term is that Dan Abnett is a big name writer. (Of course, DC has not been respecting writers over the last few years.)
"Team 7" not only ended mid-run, it ended with a "to be continued". Not a rushed ending, but a "to be continued".
One of the "Titans" compilations actually had changes made from its single issues.
