On top of the official Help Center document, you may be interested in Reviewing in the Staging Ground: A practical guide .
It's fine to skip questions you don't know how to review - just as it would be in review queues. But your experience in the Staging Ground will be much nicer, IMO, if you don't treat it like a queue. Instead, go to the main Staging Ground page (https://stackoverflow.com/staging-ground) and use the filters at the top to filter questions according to tags where you have expertise. For example, I almost exclusively look at Python questions, even though I would be qualified to review typical questions about quite a few other programming languages.
Regarding duplicates: recognizing duplicates just comes with experience with a specific topic, which is a good reason to filter by tag. But this is really the same as main site curation - you probably are just new to the idea of explicitly putting on the "curator" hat. You can find duplicates the same way we expect the OP to have looked before asking: by using the site search or an external search engine (perhaps adding something like site:stackoverflow.com
to the query. If you approach questions from the perspective that beginners' problems result from things that beginners do all the time, you'll find that you can categorize those things in your mind a lot more easily. Over time, you'll identify that you've used (or at least looked for) certain duplicate targets repeatedly; add common duplicate targets to your Saves, then you can add in:saves
to your site search queries. It helps a ton.
In my experience, most questions (the overwhelming majority) "Require Major Changes" but are perfectly well on topic. Familiarize yourself with the comment templates, the standards for closing questions on the main site and the purpose we uphold by not compromising on those standards.
There are pockets of the SG review community that are definitely overusing the "off-topic" closure reasons. My guess is that people feel more pressure to select "Not reproducible or caused by a typo" when "needs debugging details" isn't available to them - but this is missing the point of the Staging Ground. To be clear: while the site software on the main site considers that a closed question is a closed question, in principle some questions could be fixed while others can't. The distinction between the close reasons, fundamentally, is that "not reproducible" signals that attempting to give an MRE would immediately betray that OP needed to be more careful and does not actually misunderstand anything - i.e., there is not an MRE of a problem that actually needs explanation. Since there is no meaningful question, it cannot be fixed. Whereas, if a question needs debugging details, it's simply that the MRE has not yet been given. Giving it would fix the question; therefore, it can be fixed.
In the Staging Ground, if an MRE is missing, there is a corresponding "Include an MRE" template. You should use this, and then review the question as "Requires Major changes". However, more generally, a different template, or even a custom message, may be more appropriate. You should try to guide the OP based on your understanding of what makes a question suitable for the site, regardless of your assessment of the question's difficulty or your own ability to answer. For example, I have my own template comment for questions that are blatantly just dumping code and requesting debugging:
Welcome to Stack Overflow. Please read [ask]. We do not write
answers here that "find the bug"; we require a **specific**
question - which will come out of your best attempt to
[understand](//meta.stackoverflow.com/q/261592/) and
[locate](//ericlippert.com/2014/03/05) a specific problem, and
showcase it in a [mre]. A question that is suitable for Stack
Overflow is one where you have already figured out the
**specific part** of the code that does something different from
what you expect (and you should concretely *expect something*),
and don't understand why.