Related: What is the use of version tags?
I've recently noticed a few cases where the questioner has specific requirements that they've expressed solely by adding tags to the question. For example, they might ask a C++ question that they want a C++14 answer to, but instead of saying so in the question, they slap a c++14 tag on the question and get aggrieved (even downvoting) if someone posts an answer that utilizes features of C++17 or higher. Or they might post what reads as an interesting question about the rationale behind a language rule or restriction - but they've added a language-lawyer tag, since what they actually want is a recitation of chapter and verse.
It's not that I have a problem with such questions; retrocomputing is interesting, people have to deal with obsolescent systems, and language-lawyering is often fun, although I find it a bit sterile when not looking at implementation divergence or nonconformance. So I'm subscribed to quite a few old-version tags as well as language-lawyer, and don't particularly wish to change that. However it is easy to skip over tags when reading a question, since they are deemphasized in the UI. Also, the existence of such questions would imply that one could have two or more questions with verbatim identical title and body, that differ only in tags, which seems a bit odd.
Is this an acceptable use of tags, or should we expect questions to contain all relevant restrictions within the body (or title) of the question itself?