There is another unusual problem sometimes seen with buck regulators, that a buck regulator can only increase the output voltage, not actively decrease it.
All the feedback can do is reduce the PWM down to zero, but if the load is a battery, or a truly huge storage capacitance with very low dc rate of discharge, the feedback loop will open and lose control.
All this drama can occur at very light load, and DCM, so DCM is not guaranteed to be always unconditionally stable and under full control.
One possible solution for this problem might be the synchronous buck regulator where the buck regulator becomes bi directional, and the output and duty cycle stays within reasonably close limits, and the feedback loop stays active even under zero load.