I spend most of my SO time in the f# tag, so I don't know if this happens elsewhere. But I often see people voting to close questions as "recommend[ing] ... an off-site resource" when the question is nothing of the kind. Latest example: Is there any way to force Haskell code ordering to work like F#?, which as of right now has two close votes for "off-site resource" even though the question is asking "Is there a compiler option, or perhaps an IDE with some setting, to do X?" That's not asking for recommendations, which would produce opinionated answers; that's a simple question to which a factual answer exists (either there is such a compiler option or an IDE with that setting, or no such option or IDE exists). So these close votes are inappropriate.
Does this happen a lot in other, more high-traffic tags? Or is this something that happens a lot in the f# tag but it doesn't happen much elsewhere, and so I'm getting a skewed view? Because from where I'm sitting at the moment, I don't see any good reason for the "recommend[s] an off-site resource" close reason to exist; I only ever see it abused, and I don't see questions where it was a good close reason. Does it get used correctly in other tags?