Is there a reason to go to all that effort?
What's the goal?
If the world building and cultural history of your own world sounds like too much effort, maybe you are not "creative"? No need to invent the wheel when there are genres and highly-specific sub-genres with ready-made worlds built-in.
Narrative-tropes include settings the reader already knows. An author uses stock characters in situations that don't require a backstory, shorthand so the reader can go straight to the action.
'Slop' fiction is not new. Worlds can be shallow and broad like Star Wars, where honestly the less backstory the better because it only embarrasses from the lack of coherency. That's not the point.
'Intelligent' world building is also appealing, where the setting is narrow (a world-building conceit that defines the story), or deep (the story evolves from the themes, characters are representative of their environment).
It's not a binary. Readers who enjoy slop-punk-pew-pew-yee-haw can also enjoy ponderous-god-fated-galactic-dynasties.... Sometimes it's not about the details, it's about how the story is told.
Creativity is not wasted effort
World building without a story might be its own creative goal. There are no constraints on what should or should not be significant. The inclusion of events is up to the author.
This is Writing, where world building is in service to a story. the presumption is that world-building is a communication tool, and the author mostly hints at a submerged iceberg that is not directly seen in the finished work, but is evident through subtext, environmental storytelling, and culture-coded details.
Sophisticated world-building is subtle and pervasive, punk world-building is fast and loud. Some genres promise 'cozy' to signal scope and scale, while others are signaling their credentials within literary or historic context.
World-building should not lore-dump the begats of a thousand-year reign of un-eventful rulers. That is an exercise in filler-content. We have AI for this now, it is not even creative just faking the obsessive completeness of fanfiction.
If a story requires a coherent timeline of events, the author should plot (at least) the parts that are relevant, or that need clarity. But respect the reader's suspension of disbelief. The goal is to spark their imagination so the reader believes they know the world already. It's always better to allow them to fill in the gaps with their own possibilities, than to kill imagination with a lot of filler and trivia.