I always felt using trail cameras is kind of cheating. I've never used them, and don't plan to.
Part of the issue is the misconception that using cameras is some kind of guarantee that allows a hunter to somehow magically know when an animal will be in a particular spot. Those who have never used them only have "hearsay knowledge" of what trails cameras may or may not contribute to a hunt.
I was on an 800+ acre lease for 7 years and the 7 to 8 of us on the lease had anywhere from one to three dozen cameras out at any given time. I have personally reviewed hundreds of thousands of trail cam pictures from my time on that lease. I can say, with 100% certainty that none of us ever killed any particular animal as a direct benefit of trail cam pics. I did, however, learn a lot about a vast array of animal behavior which increased the total outdoor experience for me. The biggest benefit was knowing what animals were using the property. But the cameras also showed how the animals change their behavior based on time of year, hunting pressure, etc.
One does not just walk out in the woods and willy-nilly attach a camera to a tree and hope they picked a good spot. They do all the same scouting any other non-camera using hunter does to locate heavy usage areas and travel patterns and sets cameras in those locations.
On our lease bucks were somewhat patternable and definitely more active during daylight hours while in velvet. As soon as they went hard antlered, usually the first week of September and before seasons opened, they would go mostly nocturnal. Daylight activity, if any at all, became very unpredictable. Once the chase phase started they could be all over the place or disappear completely.
I could go on about this but the net was that for any practical purpose, cameras were of no value in telling us when we should sit a specific location. Many factors, including weather, wind, new scrape or rub lines, personal sightings, etc. determined where one felt might be the best spot for any particular sit.
The biggest benefit was the enjoyment of looking through pictures, learning things about game and non-game animal behavior, and seeing what quality of animals were there that one might "possibly" see if they put in their time and hunted smart and hard just like any hunter.
One last comment...for those that believe the general public should be the guiding voice in modern wildlife management vs trained wildlife professionals, as was the case with the Utah camera ban, then I hope you enjoy hunting while it is still legal at all via any method. God help us as an increasingly disconnected urban populace makes that decision.