Update: the boilerplate now reads, "I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because". It's not clever, but it is completely accurate.
The original goal of having comments for "other" was simple: try to expose whatever interpretation of the question was leading to its closure. For blatantly off-topic questions, this doesn't matter much...
- "prefix Facebook support"
- "prefix child rearing"
- "prefix waffles"
...are all fairly redundant, but at least they don't take long to type. For more subtle questions, this can be extremely helpful: if someone suddenly decides that, say, regular expressions or editors are all off-topic and starts leaving a trail of...
- "prefix regular expressions" or
- "prefix code editors"
...around after them, it becomes clear that there's a problem. It can be discussed and resolved.
In practice, these comments are often not particularly helpful, which something of a perpetual problem every time the system encourages folks to comment on anything. But that's a separate issue.
IMHO, we ought to be aiming for the tone present in the comments generated for duplicates:
When one person votes, it's possibly a duplicate. When five people vote, it's a duplicate.
That doesn't quite work for off-topic though: there's no final stage where it stops being a possibility and starts being gospel. The comment is the only record of why the question was closed, and so it has to straddle the line between possibility and actuality. Hence the original prompt:
This question appears to be off-topic because it is about ...
Unfortunately, that led to some awkward situations, which Robert outlines in his answer. I think the motivation for changing this was solid, especially since these comments often hang around on questions that don't get closed, leading casual readers to make incorrect assumptions ("I saw someone say that editors were off-topic here - we need a separate site for Vim!").
Getting away from the passive, semi-authoritative tone is good, but if it tips so far in the "possibility" direction that folks like Bill are re-writing it and Josh is feeling it weakens his opinion, then we haven't hit the right balance either.
We could just drop the ending:
This question appears to be off-topic because ...
We could more directly attribute the opinion without weakening it:
I believe this question is off-topic because ...
We could straight-up just say what is actually happening:
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because ...
Thoughts?