I'm not going to point out who and what tags I'm referring to here to avoid any meta-effect, but you can probably figure it out based on my activity.
I'm not as active as I used to be on Stack Overflow but do follow closely some niche but active tags so I see it all due to the relatively low post count.
Over the past year, a particular user started answering questions under many unregistered accounts in this tag providing answers that utilized a tool he had developed that has similar goals but was a complete alternative, all without any disclosure. So every answer that he provided had the tone of
"instead of using that tool, here's an alternative approach using this tool."
He answered many of the newest questions (at the time) and many older questions in this fashion.
At some point this year, it looked like all those answers were removed as they were most likely found to be "spam." But the answers continued to come in the same way. Eventually with a disclosure that he's the author after someone pointed out our self-promotion rules. Now the author has registered and still continues to answer in this way today in this tag.
I'm glad he's now disclosing the fact he's the author but it feels dirty to me that these answers are still like this. To me it's like answering typescript questions with coffeescript answers, or powershell questions with bash answers, or even ios questions with android answers. Sure, it may arrive at the same final answer, but it's not what was specifically asked for and the added self promotion makes it feel extra dirty.
Is there a line to be drawn when answering questions that aren't directly answering the question in the requested tag? At what point is answering with "alternative" tools for a tag that doesn't ask for it, too much?