TL;DR: 1. Let's not language-lawyer the close reasons; [Yakk's question about C++17](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/38060436/what-are-the-new-features-in-c17) is useful and should stay. 2. [lateo96's question about C++20](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/60980438/new-features-of-c20) might've been closed incorrectly, but it doesn't change the fact that it wasn't received well. Close votes being used as 'super downvotes' is not new. --- First, the [Yakk's question about changes in C++17](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/38060436/what-are-the-new-features-in-c17): I think yes, **we do have a bias** here. Not in favor of high-rep users answering their own questions, but **in favor of questions that have good answers**. I don't think Yakk's question would've been received differently if he didn't have so much rep, or if the answer was posted by someone else. But this bias is not necessarily a bad thing, in my opinion. Let's not forget that our goal is to 'build a repository of programming knowledge in a Q&A format', and the close reasons (and the other rules we have) are there *only* to facilitate it. Even though the Yakk's question is *somewhat* broad, that Q&A is a nice addition to the site (in my opinion), so it was received well. > off-topic ... it's a request for a list of things A "request for a list of things" is not a close reason, "too broad" is. Whether or not something is too broad is subjective. The [help center](https://stackoverflow.com/help/dont-ask) elaborates how broad is "too broad": > Your questions should be reasonably scoped. If you can imagine an entire book that answers your question, you’re asking too much. Yakk didn't need a book to answer his question. He crammed a complete answer into a single post. --- Next, the [lateo96's question about C++20 changes](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/60980438/new-features-of-c20): In my opinion, it might've been closed incorrectly. But close votes being used as 'super downvotes', while not a good thing, is not new. For example, we often close homework dumps with arbitrary close reasons. Note to @lateo96: Even if the consensus will be that your question is not against the rules, it won't change the fact that the question wasn't received well (score of -4). The questions on SO are often viewed as (and often are) requests for personal help, rather than suggestions to populate a knowledge base. If you ask for too much (compiling a list of C++20 features is a lot of work), it might be perceived as rude and downvoted. Even if we reopen your question, I doubt someone (who wouldn't do it otherwise) will put in the hours of effort to provide a decent answer.