Generally, questions that have a large number of answers have their answers paged so that only 30 are ever displayed to the user at one time. Take, for example, What does "use strict" do in JavaScript, and what is the reasoning behind it? which has 31 (undeleted answers) on 2 pages of answers:
However, users who can see deleted posts will actually see that there are 69 answers on that question, and by extension be able to see 3 pages of results
From this example, we see that Stack Overflow does, normally, support paging for deleted answers and also supports showing different paging options to users who can see deleted posts and to those who cannot.
It appears, however, that pagination only occurs if there are more than 30 undeleted answers (AnswerCount > 30). Unfortunately, this means that as long as the number of undeleted answers is below 30 all answers are displayed on one page regardless of how many total answers there are.
This results in some pages taking a very long time to load like What IDE to use for Python? which has 172 answers all on one page or What is the "-->" operator in C++? with 144 Answers.
Notice that there is no pagination displayed despite the number of answers:
Loading all of these answers means that the total page load time is taking somewhere between ~7.5-11.5 seconds for me to fully load a page with 172 answers. This as compared to questions with paged results (like the initially referenced question) which takes closer to ~0.5-1.25 seconds to fully load the 30 answers (page 1).
According to this SEDE query there are more than 1000 undeleted questions for which this applies.
Can pagination be based on the number of total answers and use the already existing logic to display the appropriate number of pages for users with different privilege levels?