Something I've noticed while moderating Gaming is that the mod dashboard is really awesome. You get a very utilitarian list of what needs your attention with the most common actions right at your disposal. You can expand every post excerpt in place to show the full post with the full range of commands. It's very productive and awesome.
It does have a problem, however, and it's that it's for flags only. If you instead choose to vote on something, your post gets somewhere in the 10k tools list, which is by default the 3 posts with the most and the most recent votes to do {x}. Sure, you can expand the list, sort the list by close reason... but it's not quite the same thing.
This now also applies to 10kers with their new and improved flag list, showing a "dumbed down" dashboard... again, for flags, not for votes.
This is concerning. Who casts flags?
- Users with less than 20k reputation that want a post gone.
- Users with less than 10k reputation that want a new post gone.
- Users with less than 3k reputation that want a question closed.
- Users without mod privileges that want a mod action.
Basically, once you gain the privilege to vote for something, moderators stop looking at your plead, and 10kers don't see you anymore in the flags list with the red inviting counter.
Here's a confusing chart summing up the situation right now:

Michael Mrozek puts it nicely:
For example you vote to close a post. While you're waiting around for 4 more people to notice and agree with you, a
15 rep user shows up and wants to close too, which causes a mod flag. Now a mod sees that flag and closes the post. It's like that15 rep user had more of an impact than you did. Low-rep users getting mods to close/delete by proxy leapfrogs over everyone in the middle
This isn't entirely right. Why should we pay more attention to flags than we do to votes? Shouldn't it be the other way round?
Perhaps as a result of this post, we're now starting to get free-text mod flags (not the flags I talk about above) with close vote reasons from users who also have voted to close. That's not helping as those create unnecessary burden on moderators who must dismiss those flags manually… and usually, negatively.

