Serving existing answers as a baseline, I would like to extend on the ways in which "opinion based" could be a valid close reason to consider on Meta Stack Overflow.
A great deal of discussions and feature requests taking place on Meta are backed by an opinion on how things ought to be handled in the platform. Assuming that the question emerged with good intentions, a generally good outcome here is to keep it open for answers, regardless of how much people agree or disagree with the underlying premise.
In fact, diverging opinions emerge all the time. One can even find two related questions where the highest scored answers show completely polarized opinions. This is merely a consequence of how times change, content scale changes, and active user base changes with it. Opinions on the "workings and policies of Stack Overflow" will always exist and be part of the process. With that, it is only natural for the existence of this reason to be extremely confusing.
Let's make an update to the "root" reasons for using this CV reason presented in this answer:
- when the voters judge that the post is not really a solicitation of discussion, but just a rant in question's clothing, ("$THING sucks, amirite? Discuss.")
Rants are best closed as "does not appear to seek input and discussion". It's just an attempt at venting where the OP has little interest in having a constructive discussion. Sure, sometimes it's hard to tell, and we've had controversial positions in the past, but if the signs are there, appearing not to seek input or discussion is reasonable to expect. At least in this case, we were clear about what the community was undecided with: whether or not the original author was actually interested in a constructive discussion.
- when the opinions involved are so inconsequential as to be a waste of Meta users' time to discuss ("How soon do you think Jon Skeet will hit $LARGE_NUMBER reputation?")
This is probably the only kind of question where none of the available reasons make a perfect fit. But that's probably because it is also a matter of opinion whether such a question isn't worth discussing in the first place. How "inconsequential" does a question have to be here? Where do we draw the line?
For what it's worth, it's not like we've never had similarly pointless questions before. And we do have a close reason for questions which are not about the platform itself, so that covers the obvious cases. For all other cases where the question was clear, on-topic, and posed in a constructive manner, we suddenly enter vague grounds for closure. Right now, if enough people with the privilege to CV have the opinion that the subject at hand is... just not worth discussing, then that's enough to put an end to it. Or worse, letting the discussion continue over in the comments. Yuck!
But think about this. Don't we already have a way to indicate that a question isn't useful? Ah yes, the downvote! "They are means to curate the content and let others know not to waste time reading the post." That seems like a much better sign of the overall utility and pertinence of the question, so long as we use it well. And it doesn't give an impression that a majority vote is enough to impose that "no one should discuss this at all". That would be a very slippery slope.
Given all this, I think one would rather think twice before using this reason at all. This is possibly the one close reason which is the hardest to justify. If you want to stop a discussion from happening, you'd better have a very good reason, on top of the "opinion based" reason. The CV is not a super downvote.