Well it sort of is crucial for print quality. Not giving enough exposure, which will almost certainly occur if you rate TX @400, will result in shadows that print pure black. If that's your cup of tea, go for it!
Regarding plus or minus development, not long ago I had a very low contrast scene, I exposed two sheets. The sheet that got 25% more development printed much better than the one that got normal development. I'm glad you are so happy with your film exposure/development regime, but there is no need to poo poo others methods, whatever works for you.
Since there are tons of photographs printed with great brilliance and detail (which is what ZS user are after), but with no testing of any kind, how does that fact tie into the need for all testing, targeted development etc.? I have no problem with anyone who wants to spend all that time on testing rather than actual photograph making, but I see your thread here showing the exact dangers of not seeing that others are able to do without.
Kind of interesting how you stated "I'm fine with my negatives and do not intend to change anything" which was then followed by a number of posters suggesting how you DO need to make changes based on that test, or suggesting the test itself was done incorrectly, or whatever else said since. All theories, some based on science, hardly any on actual impact on final print.
I wish I could post a photo that's been hanging on my wall since 1991, but so far that print in scanned version does not seem to show enough of proof of what it looks like. It is a winter scene from streets of Bristol CT, with classic colonial house & white clapboard siding, trees & shrubs around, sunny day, deep shadows. In other words about 9 stop range. Shot with Pentax 645 on Tmax 100, developed in Rodinal 1:25, just one area in mid shadows spot metered, film/developer never tested for any ZS implied issues. It printed with ease with some pretty mundane burn & dodge. Brilliance in whites, details in deep shadows. How was that scene possible to be that easy to print and come out the way it did, with none of the testing or lengthy multi-spot metering?
I am not completely discounting the need to get more intricate with technical side ( and I like getting technical), but I do also think that a lot of people never give the simple way a good enough try, just go full on with the ZS parlance and practice, without a second thought. Good for anyone who is having success AND fun making photographs this way, it is just not the only way. No need to make it all sound as complicated as some make it look, it is not, or at least does not have to be most of the time.