There are flaws with each of these approaches.
Flags go to Moderators and Moderators are not subject matter experts in every possible tag. How could they determine that an answer was wrong when they aren't familiar with the technology?
The trouble with this is pretty much the same, you need to be a subject matter expert otherwise all you can do in the queue is skip, skip, skip. Maybe if you needed to be a gold badge holder in one of the question's tags but then there are plenty of tags with no gold badge holders at all. The queue would eventually fill up with answers that insufficient people are experts on.
Same as 1, who validates the flag? And if there's no queue, how do you know an answer has flags? This seems rather like delete votes on answers and we already have those. You and others in your tag just need 20K reputation and also be willing to use your delete votes.
There is an outdated answers project already so perhaps this addresses this point. Outdated answers are not necessarily useless though, many people end up working with obsolete technologies.
Let's contrast the concept of a wrong answer with what you need to know to vote to close.
I don't know what it's asking but there sure are a lot of separate questions - OK I can vote to close as needing more focus.
It's asking about the number of calories in a banana - I know that's not programming and so does almost everyone else here.
It's in some other language than English - I don't have to understand that language at all to be able to vote to close.
I.e. I probably don't need to be a subject matter expert in the questions tags/technology to know there's a problem.
So what should we do about wrong answers?
Downvote them.
If an answer is highly upvoted and wrong then it's just possible your assessment of it isn't right. Downvoting isn't destructive, you can still see the answer and try it if you like, it just tells you that trying a different answer first may be a better idea.