First off– I rather like having these sorts of questions around. I commented above in defense of the lock (before digging into this). The occasional "fun" question adds some flare and character to our humble corner of the internet, and it's rather nice to come across the occasional post that makes me crack a smile. Especially so when talking about posts from way back when, from before SO was the juggernaut that it is today, when it was a platform which could afford to allow a little more fun because there wasn't a hoard of off-topic posts flooding the platform on a daily basis.
That said, by the book... things aren't really in favor of keeping this one around.
Argument #1: It's not on topic
From the "What types of questions should I avoid asking?" Help Center page (emphasis mine):
You should only ask practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face. Chatty, open-ended questions diminish the usefulness of our site and push other questions off the front page. [. . .]
If your motivation for asking the question is “I would like to participate in a discussion about ______”, then you should not be asking here...
This question isn't clearly based on any "actual" problem, since "Code Bowling" isn't a strategy that has any real world merit (at least that I can think of, correct me if I'm wrong here). It's really open-ended, asking for solutions from any language of the answerer's choice, and reads like it was created from a "I would like to participate in a discussion" stand point, which is explicitly discouraged.
So this question is firmly off-topic, fine. But the historical lock saves it, right?
Argument #2: It shouldn't have been historically locked
I personally hadn't seen them before this, but we have specific, defined criteria for when Historical Locks should be utilized on posts. These rules are defined in the Meta SE FAQ post "What is a historical lock, and what is it used for?":
Questions can be historically locked when:
The post does not meet the current guidelines for a good, on-topic question, and
The post is stellar, in spite of its off-topic nature, and
There are a large number of views, upvotes and inbound links on the post, and
The post is contentious; e.g., it has been closed and reopened at least once, or deleted and undeleted at least once.
When held up to those points, the post in question (image for future reference) fairs pretty poorly. Is it off-topic? Yes. But is it something anyone would call "stellar"? Do its 4,000 views and 37 upvotes (and 35 score) register as "a large number"? I think no is a fairly reasonable answer to both of these.
The fourth bullet says that historical lock contenders must be contentious. Via the post's timeline, it has never once, in its over 10 year history, been closed or deleted. That doesn't sound very contentious to me.
There's one other possible saving grace for a post like this described in the Meta FAQ:
Questions should not be historically locked if they are being actively maintained or have little or no redeeming value.
A good rule of thumb: If the question does not minimally meet site co-founder Jeff Atwood's third rule in the "We Hate Fun Here" blog post, it's probably not a good candidate for historical locking. The third rule is:
Does this question teach me anything that could make me better at my job? Can I learn something from it?
While I'm not sure I'd go as far as saying that the post has "little or no redeeming value," I do think it's worth asking the question– Does this post teach us anything that could make a reader a better programmer?
I mean... there's "interesting" code in some of the answers. One could study those techniques I suppose. But on the whole, the question and answers together unfortunately appear to fall short of even this basic criterion as well.
So... we hate fun?
...Kinda? I think the case against this one is pretty clear. I still don't like losing these sorts of questions to the hidden world of deleted posts; it feels a little like we're losing a bit of the old character of SO when we cast off posts that are quite literally from a different time in SO's history. But there's also a lot of truth to the idea that this specific post is pretty insignificant on its own. It's a little silly, and arguably doesn't add anything to our knowledge base.
On the other hand, I'm gonna guess that we don't have a lot of these types of posts from a decade ago hanging around still; I imagine we'll run out of posts of this era to lock at some point, probably sooner rather than later. I also think it's hard to argue that this post is actually causing harm in any sort of meaningful way, even if it's not significant enough for the official "historical lock" designation.
At the end of the day, this one should probably go, especially with it not being anything particularly novel or exciting.
Besides, we still have some other amusing and interesting items hanging around. You just have to do a little digging.
Addendum: Here's a SEDE query I pulled together that lists every post with an Historical Lock on the given SE site: Currently Historically Locked Posts