My answer to this is basically the same as I gave you back in August:
Consider what deleting this question would mean: someone asks a question on Stack Overflow, which at the time was considered on-topic for the site. Some people spend their free time writing constructive and meaningful answers hoping to help the OP and other people in the future.
Several years later Stack Overflow's policies have changed, and this question is no longer considered on-topic, but do we really want to delete the questions and all answers? That would basically mean chucking constructive content in the rubbish bin. Wouldn't that be disrepectful to the people who spent time writing answers?
This is why a lock is a better choice. It effectively "archives" the question. It preserves the content but also prevents people from adding new content.
In short, it doesn't strike useful to delete content that people spent time creating unless it's obviously terrible for some reason. I don't see how this question fits the bill.
In addition, I'm not even sure this question should even be closed, much less locked. "What is the difference between A and B?" can be a perfectly valid on-topic question and doesn't have to be a "Gorilla vs. Shark" type of opinionated question. I don't think that this question fits in the Gorilla vs. Shark category.
It is a pretty broad question, and that might be a good reason to close it. It could perhaps be made a bit less broad with an edit – not sure. Perhaps more importantly, I tend to be a bit more relaxed about casting too broad close votes if it's a reasonable question and is getting good answers, which seems to be the case here. Following rules to the letter for the sake of it is rarely useful.
I'm not sure why we need a lock though. It's not that wildly off-topic. IMHO just closing it should be enough.
All of your arguments in favour of deleting this seem to be rephrasings of "I don't like it". You are – of course – fully entitled to not like things, but that hardly seems like a very good reason to delete anything.
all information about either of them is available elsewhere, and some are maintained by the vendors themselves
This seems pretty irrelevant to me. This has never been a criteria for deleting anything. Should we now judge new answers with a Google search and see if it's "good enough" compared to "what is available elsewhere"?
Besides, I would hardly call vendor-provided information reliable (especially in the case of MongoDB if you ask me).
already outlived it usefulness.
I don't know if it has. Why? How? It seems to me that at least a few of the answers are fairly accurate. You may not like them, but that is an entirely different thing.
the topic has been beaten to a point where that question doesn't make a developer easier to decide whenever they need one or the other.
That's your opinion. Others may disagree. It's a good reason for downvoting a question and/or answer. Not for deleting it. You can't just go "I mega-disagree with it, therefore it should be deleted!". That's not how it works (or at least, not how it should work).
Lifted from the question's comments:
I'd be interesting to be able to close questions as being irrelevant based on
an external source. – Gimby 47 mins ago
@Gimby we already do, see this
meta.stackoverflow.com/q/280829/792066 – Braiam 44 mins ago
I've seen you use the fact that that question was deleted as an "argument" for
deleting more stuff several times already.
As I have argued before, it is not a good comparison. At all.
Look over the answers in that question, most are just "I'm using foo! It's
really great!". Hell, those answer are just barely even eligible for
copyright, as they contain so little creative effort.
If we remove all the "it's really great"-type of cruft then all we're left with
is a list of links. I don't see a single objective "this JSON parser is
different from others because [...]"-argument anywhere in that entire
question.
The answers on the MongoDB and Redis question are very different. They're the
result of creative effort, and contain some good reasoning on actual expertise.
I would call it a "good subjective".
In other words, it is a very different question with very different answers.
Perhaps it should be closed – as mentioned I haven't made up my mind about
that – but it most certainly shouldn't be deleted just because some other very
different question was.