Idk since also depends on platform. Some cliches become so common they feel like they have become their own genre: bad boys, mafia ml, or kidnapped by alpha on Wattpad. They're not something I think you would really see here anyway. I don't look for those stories here but you can feel other cliches replace it such as a pokemon collect it all harem, an isekai where mc dies and adapts to new world without much conflict from their previous life (like dealing with adjusting to things and loved ones they left behind, and now they won't see them anymore. Etc etc.)
For me, I'm not really into stories where the synopsis says something along the lines of "Join so and so's journey on..." I mean there are probably great stories out there that use it but I just feel not immersed into the actual story plot and setting. It feels like someone retelling a story versus letting me the reader imagining being right there along with the characters in the story and seeing the plot progress. It also feels like something isekai like (but there tons of stories not isekai that probably do this maybe). Not really into isekai..
Like someone said, its all about how its executed. Popular tropes/cliches can be good, but a lot flock to it bc its popular but don't really bring something else to the table that makes it good. I sort of think the common isekai trope where someone dies and they get transported into another world falls a bit like that. Or transmigration actually. I read a few transmigration stories in the past and it feels a bit similar to how others describe isekai a bit- someone dies and gets transported to another time/another world in a society that operates a bit differently from their previous modern life. A lot of times it feels about dumping someone from modern day to another place to make themselves appear smarter with their modern knowledge. There isn't always an explanation for their sudden random deaths or why they got a new life in another world after dying (if there is, it feels a bit flat. like maybe a deity or system gave them that option, but that's about it - not really revisited in later chapters or have much depth, its just served as a kickstarter). There's also the part where it feels like quick adaptation and not much conflict with their previous life modern day views or things.