I ***really*** love this idea, and I have the numbers to prove it would be effective.  At the bare minimum, I wanted to make sure that the deletion scale would be about right, since that number *sounds* big, but we have to remember that we're talking about questions which would *normally* be Roomba'd, had comments not existed at all.

Let's take [a period from 90 days ago as of this post](http://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/531294/roomba-eligible-questions-sans-comment-requirement?opt.withExecutionPlan=true) as to not introduce a sampling bias due to SEDE's cutoffs, and run it through the rule chain.  This query picks up questions which would be eligible, sans deleted ones (since their work is done).  It looks like, according to the rough estimate provided by the OP, about **413,000** questions could be deleted using this new rule.

[There is strong correlation to suggest that](http://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/531320/roomba-eligible-questions-comment-breakdown?opt.withExecutionPlan=true), the more comments a question accrues, the less likely it would be impacted at all.  If a question has 23 or more comments, we would only be deleting **50** or less questions per comment bracket above 23.  This *might* be a signal that others have alluded to for those questions to get a once-over and see what's going on with them, since they may hold some value, or may use a Community Wiki to move an answer from the depths of their comments to an actual answer.

Out of all of those questions, [besides the most common thing which is to "create the post"](http://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/531461/roomba-eligible-questions-action-breakdown?opt.withExecutionPlan=true), the most common thing to happen to these posts is for them to be closed, of which about 19,000 are, or a curiously low **4%**.  Some other interesting things of note is that a handful of them are protected as well, indicating that there was some value to these for some reason in the past.

For the curious, especially those wanting to know how many duplicate questions would be impacted, provided that these questions aren't linked as duplicates of another, we *could* stand to lose [something on the order of 18,800 questions closed as a duplicate](http://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/531474/roomba-eligible-questions-signpost-impact), or something like **96%** of the total closed questions already present.

Once more, for the curious:  [the impact of deletions year over year would be incredible](http://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/531478/roomba-eligible-questions-possible-deletions-by-judgment-year); bear in mind that these values are additive (meaning they take into account last year's values), but between 2011 and 2012, we had a jump of over 60,000 questions that would've become eligible based on removing the comment rule.

Again, I hope someone makes this happen.  That's 413,000 *less* questions taking up space, and less reasons to have people having to manually delete these questions on their own.