(EDIT I've left the post as-is but see some of the conceptual refinements offered by commenters below the post.)
Have I completely misunderstood how Stack Overflow works? (Or did I just misunderstand the question...)
I always interpreted the purpose behind
- providing an [mcve],
- disallowing primarily opinion-based questions,
- snippets
was to facilitate the development of high-quality answers elaborating a demonstrably workable solution.
I don't see how a bounty is any different. To me, a bounty is simply a polite, incentivized version of an all-caps title (à la "I REALLY NEED HELP!!1!").
I have been guilty of posting a very simple code fragment without testing it, but I do so aware that I risk a flood of down-votes because I forgot a comma and it throws an exception.
Overwhelmingly, I take time, usually learning something new in the process, write some code in an IDE, compile/lint it, and post that as an answer. No, Stack Overflow is not a code writing service, but isn't that what MCVEs are for?
I thought the idea of "answers must be tested" was implicit in every question.
That said, everything about suitability for a particular purpose still applies, just because some code compiles doesn't mean it's the best (or even a good) answer.
Now, playing devil's advocate to myself...
I've been awarded one bounty so far for an answer on updating the Dartium VM in a custom compile of Chromium. I did a bunch of reading and answered basically "no" with references, but didn't test it.
I was interested in the problem, but just compiling Chromium without the proper environment setup can take 8+ hours. Going more in-depth was incredibly prohibitive.
I was eventually awarded (I believe, automatically) the bounty because I offered the only answer with a sufficiently positive score.