Tidally locked might even mean "goldilocks longitudes" on the planet, where tenuous life can develop in the most conveniently neutral part of the near-side/far-side gradient (and convenient shadows to be in or out of, from the local geography). Once it gets hold, evolution of hotter/colder/brighter/darker tolerances then can happen, if at all possible.
Though if the theory that Earth's lunar tides helped our development (isolating littoral pools, periodically, to open up many separate prebiotic experiments in abiogenesis at the start, and stranding proto-amphibians at a later time, then perhaps a near-constant set of conditions aren't good enough to tweak actual solid developments out of the random mush. Especially if it means there's less effective experimental area, comparing and contrasting contemperaneously temperate areas across vast swathes of a rotating sphere with our above planet having much narrower slice betwixt Hell and Hoth, easily cut through by simple geological barriers to further restrict migration when libration or solar variation does cause localised discomfort (see also Earthly cloud forests, 'lifting off').
But interesting to think about how it might develop one or other (or several?) branches of life.