You should select tags that make scope of the question clear for future readers and attract the right experts to the question to answer it. Experts tend to watch specific high level tags (like css or java) so always including one of those types of tags is a good idea. The more obscure the tag, the less people will be actively watching it. Any other tags help narrow down the context for someone scanning the question. For example, I watch ruby-on-rails but tend to skip sidekiq because I'm not usually suited for answering Sidekiq questions.
A common rule of thumb is to ask yourself, "Would a example-tag expert be able to solve this problem?" If the answer is "yes," that tag is a good candidate for the question.
Use version tags if your question only applies to that specific version. For example, use the css3 tag if the question is only relevant to CSS3. If the question is also applicable to CSS2, for example, then just css is good enough.
General or broad tags, like animations, are tricky to get right. I recommend avoiding these tags when there is a technology specific tag that can be used instead (like css-animations). General tags should be used for questions that don't depend on a specific implementation.
In your specific example, I would choose to tag with css and css-animations.
css-animations
, I would guess not too many users keep that as a favorite tag so they'll miss it. On the other hand, lots of users probably favoritecss
, meaning their homepage will be curated to include it. Don't go overboard though.