You make a good point about how well written the question is. It has all the things we would want in a great question. Those are all also all the subtle things someone who is active on meta would notice. The very first thing I noticed (and what I suspect most other people would notice as well) is that it is a silly question. And I can easily see many new users or the users that just spew crap at the site taking that as evidence that they can ask anything they want. "I wrote a hello world program in bread dough. Why won't gcc compile my bread? I want to eat it!!11!!1" Or "How can I set my programmable thermostat? I tried gcc." Everything is on topic as long as you tried gcc!
Also, and more important than anything else, we hate fun, especially on April Fools.
To preserve some of the rationale from the comments (which is better than what I originally had anyway):
From the help center on what not to ask under subjective questions it states that if a question is just "mindless social fun" then it is off topic.
You can play devil's advocate all you like and claim that a duck robot walks like a duck and quacks like a duck and is therefore a duck. But waddling and quacking are only two facets of what makes a duck a duck. We could get hyper-specific about what determines "duckness" or "on-topic". But then we either end up with a definition that is too broad and allows things we don't want for the sake of a few edge cases that we do want. Or we define things too narrowly and miss out on lots of things we really do want here. And that's why we have humans moderating the site, not machines. It's a judgement call.
And as we go along we change what we call "on topic" as we try to define that better. We used to have the RTFM close reason. Now we don't. We used to have the "too localized" reason. We didn't used to have the "debugging requires an MCVE" reason.
I may not be able to formally define what every off-topic question looks like, that doesn't mean I can't recognize that something is off-topic. And even if I believe something is off-topic, I need at least 4 other people to agree with me before something gets closed. StackOverflow's moderation strategy is built on the idea that judgement calls have to be made and that (most of the time) it isn't a unilateral decision. If five people say it's off-topic, it's off-topic. If five more people disagree, we reopen. If it gets too hotly contested, either one of the Powers That Be steps in or we bring it to meta.