It looks to me like you're wanting to pause execution by slowing time down gradually rather than instantaneously stopping it and you want to use an easing method.
To set an ease on a DOTween just add on the Ease method call via chaining like this:
DG.Tweening.DOTween.To(value => Time.timeScale = value, 1, 0, 0.4f).SetEase(Ease.InCubic));
Chain more methods together like this, this runs Debug.Log on every Update call:
DG.Tweening.DOTween.To(value => Time.timeScale = value, 1, 0, 0.4f).OnUpdate(()=>{ Debug.Log(Time.timeScale); }).SetEase(Ease.InCubic);
Running this code shows that Time.timeScale doesn't actually get to zero, probably due to floating point precision errors; however, using the OnUpdate chain method Time.timeScale can be assigned zero once it gets close enough:
DG.Tweening.DOTween.To(value => Time.timeScale = value, 1, 0, 0.4f).OnUpdate(()=>{ if (Time.timeScale < 0.001f) Time.timeScale = 0; }).SetEase(Ease.InCubic);
I hope this helps!