I'm seeing the titled comment more and more these days, perhaps because I'm more aware of it rather than an actually increase of its use but certain from around 2015 onwards it appears to have become a fairly regular thing to do.
In some instances, where a given question doesn't have an accepted answer they can be useful to mark out what has worked, but isn't that the point of upvoting?
In other instances, where the accepted answer is no longer relevant but another answer is, such as through version changes, they can once again be helpful if there are a variety of low vote answers with no clear 'right' one yet standing out.
But in many situations I reckon they are just opinionated noise. Take this popular question on branch, tag, trunks. The accepted answer is perfectly acceptable, it covers the question accurately and concisely and it appears many others agree as it is pretty highly voted.
The second answer is also good as it also covers these details but also adds a use case which some people may find nice, however in doing so it over triples the length of the answer.
So both answers are acceptable yet someone has taken it upon themselves to decide that the second answer is the one they prefer and has opted to voice it in the comments.
Isn't it the asker's right/privilege to decide what the accepted answer is and shouldn't we respect that unless there is clear reason not to?
These comments, used in this way, annoy me as it is basically an insult to the author of the question for their poor answer picking skills and an insult to the author of the accepted answer for not fitting the commenter's criteria.
Are these unconstructive, should I flag them as such, or should I just ignore it and move on?