Will it become more common place to manually feature questions that draw a lot of attention?
In general, I don't think the Hot Meta Posts tends to have very useful content. There are always a few posts there, and usually, they aren't much to look at. However, when we get a post that all but requires participation of the whole community, or when it's a controversial issue, the hot meta posts (usually with vote counts in the hundreds really helping people know it's worth looking at) has drawn in users that have offered very important viewpoints to the discussion.
A couple examples that jump to mind like this are the What does our long term community need? What does our long term community need to feel valued? discussion and the Stack Overflow is undermining community standards by promoting an off-topic question in its newsletter posts, but there were dozens in the last year alone, where people really wanted to be aware of things, and since they were never featured, either the person has to be active on Meta, or they need to be displayed in the Hot Meta Posts sidebar.
The automatic Hot Meta Posts designation took care of that, although it's kind of a sledge hammer for screws at times. I understand it being taken away, but it leaves a gap between things that need to get into the community eye and the mechanism to make that happen. Hence my concern that posts that draw a lot of inherent Meta attention should be tagged as featured more liberally.
Note that Tim commented that we can flag things for featuring, and if moderators agree, they can feature the item. That's a reasonable mechanism, but it would be good to know how common it will be for such flags to get approved.