Thing you better focus on first is "patrolling" your tags - ones you're most active in asking, answering, editing. There are two ways to do this, first by browsing questions as usual and voting when you stumble upon a close-worthy one, and second - by filtering review queue by your tags.
If you think of it, this makes perfect sense.
Closing in "your" tags is where you are in most demand, because your skills and expertise in these make a solid foundation to evaluate troublesome questions.
Also, this is very efficient approach effort-wise. It's so much easier to evaluate questions related to area where you are proficient. To find out how it could be different, try review filtered by duplicates in an unfamiliar tag... just be careful and drop it when your brain will start boiling. :)
The last but not the least, this effort brings almost immediate benefit to you personally, not only to "whole system". This way, you help to keep an area around you, tags you usually visit, clean, so that you can enjoy it more.
Now that we're done with top-priority part, what else you can do if you have spare close votes and want to help. This primarily depends on how much time and effort you're ready to "invest" and the options are really wide.
I will share observations on a few approaches I tried myself.
First option can be called picking a low hanging fruit. At first, try filtering review queue by different close reasons and pick one that feels easier to evaluate to you. FWIW my personal favorite is too broad, with unclear being close next (opinion-based is worth checking too but to me it worked worse).
After you pick the favorite reason, use it in filter and roll through queue voting only on questions that immediately and strongly feel low quality and worthy of closure and just skip anything else... skip anything where you can't decide on closing in a few seconds.
This way is probably least effort consuming; after you get used to it, it will take you maybe 5-10 minutes a day, no more. Important part of what makes it so easy is that this way seems to be supported by the system: queue prioritisation heuristics currently appear to be tuned to bring low quality questions closer to the top, so that these get closed faster (so you end up skipping less than one might think given above advice).
Another option is clean-up events, when someone finds a bunch of questions worth closing and brings it to meta asking for help. To regularly participate in these, one usually needs to somehow track cleanup requests and visit meta to find it out and decide whether it's worth participating.
This is probably most effort consuming sort of activity; in my experience it could easily take one or two hours a day (every day, sometimes for a few weeks, go figure). But it's completely up to you to decide whether it's worth it so there's really no one else to blame that it takes so much.
Last option I tried is participation in SO Close Vote Reviewers activity. Details of this approach are quite thoroughly covered in a prior answer, I will only add that effort wise it seems to be somewhere in between two other ways. In my experience, it can take 20-30 minutes a day after you learn the ropes.