What can we expect to happen from the removal of this tag?
Will kids just learning how to program in Minecraft stop posing questions? Probably not. So you end up probably seeing "Minecraft" more in the titles than the tags, or not at all and just end up seeing the bad question.
The Minecraft-related traffic doesn't necessarily go down with the removal of the tag, and I think the real focus of this is really about the traffic and the low-quality answers associated, not about the tag. Actually that's my thought on half the things I see discussed here -- the real problem is the traffic, and the low-quality questions that can bring.
Take a game-related API that demands considerably more expertise than unreal-engine4. Is that really so much more on-topic than Minecraft? The difference, as I see it, is that UE 4 tends to just attract more competent/mature developers.
So I really think the tag is fine unless we can somehow show that the Minecraft-related traffic would be mitigated somehow with its removal. I think far more likely is that the traffic will spill out and bleed over more to other areas of the community. I know that's a bad argument ideologically, but I mean, what should we expect?
In general, I think we need to relax a lot of rules for tags. For example, I'd suggest that tags like design
or architecture
are equally off-topic, because you tend to find so many questions there which appeal to opinionated answers. They're well-formed questions but ultimately appealing to experienced opinions. But that's the nature of design -- when someone asks if an architectural design choice is good or bad, they're appealing to biased answers, since software design is typically not a perfect science. It doesn't always break down into perfect SE metrics and is often guided by far too many variables including ones like what might best suit the experience level/comfort of the implementor. But I'm on the side that we should relax the general rules of the site and let such questions slide (as they often do) in such tags, since experienced biased answers tend to be appropriate for those tags. So I have a more confederate rather than federal mindset here, so to speak, where each independent tag is like an independent state -- loosely subject to the rules of the federal government, but allowed to kind of evolve in their own direction a bit.