For just shy of a year now, we've had the following close reason on Stack Overflow:
Questions asking us to recommend or find a tool, library or favorite off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it.
I really like it. It's insanely useful for quickly resolving a broad class of generally-unproductive questions where there's no clear problem to be solved while still providing specific guidance as to when it should be used and how to ask a better question.
But occasionally, it seems to motivate some rather unproductive behaviors itself:
I started using the search engine and I saw very few question had false positive. So, Let's use the SQL query equivalent! There are ≈ 4,000 questions to close!
As I was writing up an answer to that proposal, I realized that we don't really have a single, succinct description of what "recommendation questions" are and how to avoid them written with Stack Overflow in mind. That close reason links to an answer I wrote a couple years ago that... Is probably reasonable... But is also fairly specific to one person's question, and hardly quick to read.
There have been other attempts at teasing out a good explanation for these, but nothing that quite captures the key difference between a question that begs for a list of recommendations and one that focuses on solving a problem (although I think Kate Gregory's attempt came very, very close to this).
So I guess what I'm asking is, do we need something better than a terse close reason here? A single meta faq or help center article? And if so, what should it contain?