As I said before (for Python specifically), you could use the currently available features within Stack Snippets to get something similar:
<script src="//repl.it/embed/Caky/1.js"></script>
Of course, you should never just leave it at that. You need to provide the real code, not just a link. This is Ruby:
print "World, hello!"
a = [ 45, 3, 19, 8 ]
b = [ 'sam', 'max', 56, 98.9, 3, 10, 'jill' ]
print (a + b).join(' '), "\n"
print a[2], " ", b[4], " ", b[-2], "\n"
print a.sort.join(' '), "\n"
a << 57 << 9 << 'phil'
print "A: ", a.join(' '), "\n"
b << 'alex' << 48 << 220
print "B: ", b.join(' '), "\n"
print "pop: ", b.pop, "\n"
print "shift: ", b.shift, "\n"
print "C: ", b.join(' '), "\n"
b.delete_at(2)
b.delete('alex')
print "D: ", b.join(' '), "\n"
Now, before you say "but I want to force them to make an MVCE", let me tell you that this will not work as a solution. They will find a way to screw it up:
print "https://repl.it/Caky/1"
Half the time when a new user uses the feature as it is, the snippet is actually a Java snippet. Or it fails to compile. Or it compiles, but nothing shows up.
JS/HTML/CSS are native to the browser, so our current system easily accommodates them. Most, if not all of these other online testers fail to work with anything graphical, which was one of the biggest advantages of Stack Snippets in the first place.
In the end, this trick is really only useful for answerers who want an edge. I wouldn't overdo it, as I personally feel this has the potential to become a broken link or a security vulnerability.