When I'm in the review queues, I'm diligent about upvoting existing comments that provide important and relevant feedback to the author. (This also happens automatically if you duplicate canned review comments.) The goal is to add weight to existing feedback in hopes that it's taken seriously.
The problem is that there's also a daily limit of 30 comment votes. I suspect that's reasonable for most contributors. If you're diligently upvoting existing feedback while reviewing 20-40 posts in 2-3 queues each day, however, you'll hit this with some regularity.
Given this, I'd like to suggest either:
- Establish a separate limit for comment votes in the review queues, or
- Increase the comment vote limit for all contributors to e.g. 80 votes (if not more).
The former is more targeted to this problem, and would have the least spillover effects. But it also seems like a lot of extra engineering (as detailed by @Makyen in the comments) for a comparatively small set of contributors. As such, the latter would be dramatically easier, while still safeguarding against automated abuse (assuming that's the primary reason for this limit).
I acknowledge that this probably only affects a really small percentage of contributors. But I'd argue that we should encourage reviewers to upvote useful feedback, and this limit can restrict that effort.
Edit: As highlighted by @zcoop98 in the comments, raising the vote limit would also be really useful here on Meta Stack Overflow as well, since these questions often end up with more comments than answers.
Is this too marginal of a gain to provide much benefit to the community? Are there other opportunities for abuse I'm overlooking to e.g. raising the comment vote limit?