Let's consider a family of varieties defined by two equations in $\operatorname{Spec}(\mathbb{C}[x_1,\dots,x_n])$.
First, Let $\Delta_i, i=1,2$ be a finite set of monomials in $\mathbb{C}[x_1,\dots,x_n]$, for simplicity, I use $X^v$ to denote an element of $\Delta_i$. Then $$F_i=\{\sum_{X^v \in \Delta_i}c_vX^v \mid c_v \in \mathbb{C}\}$$ is a family of polynomials parameterized by $\mathbb{C}^{\#(\Delta_i)}$, where $\#(\Delta_i)$ is the cardinality of $\Delta_i$.
Let $V_{f,g}$ be a variety in $\operatorname{Spec}(\mathbb{C}[x_1,\dots,x_n])$ defined by $f=g=0$ with $f \in F_1, g \in F_2$ respectively. Then $V_{f,g}$ is parameterized by $\mathbb{C}^{\#(\Delta_1)} \times \mathbb{C}^{\#(\Delta_2)}$.
Is the family of codimesion $2$ intersection $V_{f,g}$ parameterized by an open set (might be empty) of $\mathbb{C}^{\#(\Delta_1)} \times \mathbb{C}^{\#(\Delta_2)}$?
I think the point is to find an "algebraic" characterization of dimension. However, it will be good even if such set is not open, but contains a nonempty open set (or the set itself is empty). Geometrically, it seems quite plausible this is the case.
Edit I think the result might be true in $\operatorname{Proj}(\mathbb{C}[x_0,\dots,x_n])$ by the following argument:
First, the parameterized space is really $\mathbb{P}^{\#(\Delta_1)-1} \times \mathbb{P}^{\#(\Delta_2)-1}$ after ignoring the case $f=g=0$, and module the constant.
Let $a \in \mathbb{P}^{\#(\Delta_1)-1} \times \mathbb{P}^{\#(\Delta_2)-1}$, and $V_a$ be the intersection parameterized by $a$. Then we have a "variety" $S$ (I am a little worry about $S$ to be a variety, but since the following construction is "algebraic", it should be a variety )
$$S = \{(a, V_a) \mid a \in \mathbb{P}^{\#(\Delta_1)-1} \times \mathbb{P}^{\#(\Delta_2)-1}\} \subset \mathbb{P}^{\#(\Delta_1)-1} \times \mathbb{P}^{\#(\Delta_2)-1} \times \mathbb{P}^n.$$
It should be a projective variety, with a natural projection
$$S \to \mathbb{P}^{\#(\Delta_1)-1} \times \mathbb{P}^{\#(\Delta_2)-1}, \quad (a, V_a) \mapsto a.$$ This projection is proper, then by the upper semicontinuity of the fibre, we know there is an open set of $ \mathbb{P}^{\#(\Delta_1)-1} \times \mathbb{P}^{\#(\Delta_2)-1} $ such that the fibres are of codimension $2$.