The site has evolved. Evolved a great deal, and now it's essentially different from one it was at the beginning. I hope, after promoting this post for a very long time, there is not a soul left who wouldn't agree with that.
Stack Overflow has accomplished all the quantity-oriented goals already. Now it's time to navigate towards quality-oriented goals.
Let me draw your attention to this question: How can I prevent SQL injection in PHP? All the 10k+'s can see nearly one hundred low quality posts, deleted by the community effort. Although new answers were coming at quite a constant rate, not a single quality answer appeared for years. So, as one can see, all the might of the gamification were unable to improve this page's content (let alone cosmetic fixes). To me - it's a sign. A message.
To my great relief, authorities finally managed to lock this question, with extremely proper reason:
This question's answer is a collaborative effort: if you see something that can be improved, just edit to improve it! No additional answers can be added here
In a way, it's a model of the entire of Stack Overflow: There are A TON of answers already, there are A TON of willing participants already... resulting in TONS of below-any-acceptable-quality posts. Yet all this litter content is happen to be scattered in millions ordinal questions, and there is no way to keep an eye on all of them, as opposite to one single popular topic.
Following the analogy, Stack Overflow has to be locked in a somewhat similar way. Not entirely, of course, but it certainly should have to be reoriented towards quality of the content.
But that's not enough. It is not enough to limit something. It's essentially to encourage the opposite movement, and here goes this point of gamification. All right, consider it the main feature of the site. Mature adults boast with badges like boy scouts, rep-hunting strategies are officially and shamelessly discussed on the Meta, and so on. All right, let's take it for granted. But it's time to use it for the something really useful.
Though I've got some idea on the certain measures - something like reputation points for the editing posts, something like "gold badge rule" for the reviews, something like removing "Legendary"-like badges, openly aimed at quantity, not quality - I'd like to ask the community; If you agree with the premises and like the goal - please share your thoughts on the practical measures which will encourage quality over quantity, using the same old gamification stuff with badges, reputation and unicoins.