Recommendations are a recurring topic on multiple stack-exchange sites.
Some site allow Recommendations (ex: boardgames) , some not (ex :gaming) . There's many reason for that and I'm still remember animated discussions on that subject on the Gaming meta.
Then there is that existential problem with scifi.stackexchange, "What problems does answering a question on this site solve?"
The only common problem I can think of is What to read/watch next?, which obviously led to a big number of recommendation questions, later slightly disguised as list question. And the main trouble with these questions isn't objectivity at all, some of them aren't even subjective. It's the fact that they don't have an answer - they are open ended.
Those questions are monstrously popular. It's because :
- There's an actual problem to be solved, find the next book I should read or which technical book to buy to learn something
- This problem is quite common.
Related to the Real Questions Have Answers blog post, It fails the "real questions have answers, not items or ideas or opinions." statement.
But it's still a "practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face. " and that require expertise to answer.
The problem is that they is multiple acceptable answers, and the asker is not the best person to evaluate the best answer because he don't know the which one is the best along the others propositions, he cannot test it in short term. Even the need to accept one is questionable.
So, Is a Recommendations an acceptable kind of List or just a plain List that we need to close?