My final cam check was done last weekend and cams moved accordingly. It's not only good to know where they are, but where they aren't. Draw on the knowledge you've gained from summer checks and food sources. Make an educated decision where to hunt opening morning and hunt that area. Check that cam after the hunt. If it's a flop move to stand / cam site number two and repeat the process. Hunt the stand, check the cam after the hunt. The only reason to go to a spot now is to get in stealthy as possible and hunt it, check the cam on the way out. Resists the urge to go check the others. If you want to check them, hunt them first. It's all about the element of surprise. If you go in to check a cam then come back later to hunt it the gig may already be up and you'll be hunting a "was there" instead of an "is there". Checking cams before hunting, even days before, is a recipe for always being one step behind.
Years ago I snuck in a spot one evening and hung a mobile set. I hunted it that evening and again the next morning. A doe came out of the woods and made a line for the stand across the field. A local buck named the Tall 8 was right behind her. She came right under the stand. He stopped 45 yards out and wouldn't come an inch closer. He never looked up at me or knew I was there. But he knew I had been there recently. To this day I am convince I hung that stand that evening and he came through sometime that night. He knew I had been there and as a result wouldn't come an inch closer. If you go in to check a cam, get great pics and decide to hunt it later he may already know you've been there and you'll be wasting your time.