My answer to this question from 2013 is accepted and currently has a score of 17. Yet the question itself is closed as "too broad".
Based on the acceptance and the comments left by the OP, it seems like the answer definitely solved their problem. Based on the subsequent upvotes, it seems likely that it has also helped several others with the same problem. This seems like a pretty clear indicator that the question is, in fact, evidently answerable.
(FWIW, the question is currently the top Google result for "ISAAC cipher in PHP" or just "ISAAC PHP". It's also linked from the official ISAAC home page.)
Nor do I see anything to suggest that the question would attract an excessive number of different partial answers; certainly, this has not happened during the 1.5 years after the question was asked and before it was closed.
Yet my several attempts over the years to get the question reopened have been unsuccessful. The first two were unanimously declined by reviewers. The latest one, after I decided to add an explanatory comment describing why I believed the question should be reopened, managed to gain one additional reopen vote before it, too, was declined by three other reviewers.
So, rather than keep repeatedly banging my head against that particular wall, I figured I should take the issue to meta here and ask for a broader community opinion:
Is this really a question that should remain closed? And if so, why?
Of course, the fact that the question is closed does not really personally inconvenience me in any way, since my answer is still there and steadily accumulating upvotes. But it still feels awkward, not to mention potentially unfair towards anyone who might some day wish to contribute an alternative answer. Also, I feel like there's clearly some sort of a disconnect between my view of what makes an acceptable SO question and that of the reviewers, and I'd like to figure out if I should somehow adjust my perspective here or just chalk it up to careless reviewers being careless.
(Also, for the sake of full disclosure, let me note that I'm also hoping that, by bringing up this matter here, the "meta effect" will work for me and provide the extra votes needed to actually get the question reopened.)