No. You still got about 9 amps going thru the first positive connection and the last negative connection. Im not sure if it would solve the voltage drop. Maybe but i dont think so. If this is the way you wanted to go you shoulda gotten a cc driver for serial connection.
Wait....
its a bit late here so i might be dumming; but i think youll actually end up worse than originally. I think youll have around 9 amps passing thru each of the strips. The closer to the first strip in the daisy chain the more power going from positive to positive connector: on the first strip youll have 1/10 of the power going thru the diodes, 9/10 going from positive connector to other end positive connector to feed the rest of the strips. First strip negative side: just that 1/10 of the power that went thru the diodes. Next one in the chain you have that 9/10 coming from positive from the first strip: 1/10 goes thru diodes the rest 8/10 going from one +connector to the + connector on the other side of the strip. 2nd strip negative side : takes the 1/10 from the first strip and the 1/10 from second strip diodes for 2/10 of the amps. See the pattern? 9+1, 8+2 etc: each strip seems like it takes the full amps of the circuit thru the trace connecting the connectors if you add the positive and the negative sides together. Is it me or does this look like the worst way possible? Sorry, no shade, i know your trying to get your cables management right which is a good endeavour. I hate huge parallel connections, made several rats nests of cables myself. But i think this aint the way.
just get one big wago, 6 or more. Then do what you did on the first but only 2 strips per daisy chain. Or prawns suggestion.
Edit: thought about it a bit more; no, its not the worst way just another bad way. First connections being the worst. Also like to compliment OP on doing the exact right thing: try first with your own reason and creativity, but then getting someone to check up on it. Kudos. Sorry if my original reply sounded savage.