Just 'not a good question'?
If you follow the 'guidelines' of Writing The Perfect Question by Jon Skeet, you will see this:
Make sure it’s obvious what you’re trying to get out of the question.
Too many “questions” are actually just statements: when I do X,
something goes wrong.
In the above question(s) you have linked, I think It's pretty clear what's going wrong, and if that's not enough, they have images and attempts at solving it themselves. all have also explained why it hasn't worked for them.
Not useful for other members?
A quick search on Codepen, for example, shows 60 results for the word 'teardrop' (note, not 'waterdrop' etc), and the first result has over 6000 views - doesn't that say at least a few people have searched for such a shape?
If you think about it, such a shape is quite common in quite a few situations (labelling/etc) - and whilst the others are more 'localised', it doesn't mean that they are bad questions. They show:
- an attempt
- a reason for use (whether for a star rating or otherwise)
- a specific problem which can be answered in a couple of paragraphs.
So that rules out the 'too broad' close-vote option.
Too Localised?
Now, as for 'too localised', I found this question, in which the answer contained:
a way to close certain questions that could definitely not help anyone
Now, how exactly can you state what does and doesn't help one person or another?
I also came across:
https://meta.stackexchange.com/a/107273/278787
which suggests EFFORT is a huge attribute to a question. I feel all linked questions (so far) have shown effort, and it is clear (via upvotes and answers) that the community is happy to answer these 'challenge' questions.
So, in answer to your question, the community decides if such a question is worthwhile or not. It is up to the community to decide whether or not a question, whether too hard or too easy, is worth retaining on the site.
I (personally) think these questions have helped at least a few people, and that has been displayed via the voting system.