Suppose I have a system of polynomials which are homogeneous but of distinct degrees that I want to solve simultaneously:
$$F_1(z_1,\ldots,z_n)=\cdots=F_m(z_1,\ldots,z_n)=0.$$
Let $X(\mathbb F)$ denote the solutions to this system over the field $\mathbb F$. For the application I have in mind, the system is overdetermined so $m>n$. Now suppose I can show something like $X(\mathbb C)$ contains no non-trivial points, or that the points all live in some other variety, or some other strong type of statement about the complex solutions. Is there a condition under which a similar result could be deduced for $X(\mathbb F_p)$? Here $\mathbb F_p$ is the prime field with $p$ elements.