What you are asking for is more than a cosmetic change to the user interface but a change in policy.
I hate answers that don't actually answer the question as much as you do, but...
The Current Policy
As it stands right now, we are not supposed to flag as NAA or VLQ those answers which look like answers but actually do not answer the question. So you should never have to click "Recommend Deletion" in the review queue because the answer is not actually answering the question. If you see such answers in the queue that's because someone flagged them in spite of the policy in place.
There is a good reason we don't open the NAA flag to such answers. With the policy currently in place, most of the time an answer that has been pushed into the LQ queue can be evaluated without knowing anything about the technology involved. An answer that says:
Thanks for the solution...
or
Can someone help me...
is worthy of deletion. It does not matter whether the post continues with C# code, JavaScript, SQL, or whatever. They can also be evaluated without having to look at the question. Exceptions exist but they are relatively rare.
Allowing Answers that don't Actually Answer the Question to be NAA
If you open NAA to include such answers then you'll always have to read the question to decide whether these answers should be deleted and a substantial number of such answers will require knowledge of the specific technologies involved in order to decide whether they should be deleted.
Suppose someone asks "What does the ++
operator do in JavaScript?" and someone answers "You can't assign to None
in Python." It is blindingly obvious the answer is not answering the question. However, there are a great deal of cases where the answer is not answering the question but this fact is not obvious unless you have really good knowledge about the technology involved. I see this happen repeatedly in the requirejs tag: newbies in the technology post answers that in some other cases could actually have something to do with the problem but not here. These are not actually answering the question but only someone whose substantially worked with RequireJS would know this. And I know by the downvotes such answers are not getting (except from me) that very few people manage to realize that the answer is not actually answering the question.
Among the answers that don't actually answer the question, the fact of the matter is that I see many more answers of the non-obvious kind than answers of the obvious kind. If such answers would be allowed to be marked as NAA, people would soon filter the LQ queue by technology and we'd see the queue grow and grow and grow, like the close queue.
When the Obvious is Wrong
Moreover, what appears obvious is not always necessarily so. My favorite examples are: Selenium questions and questions marked with coffeescript. So Alice comes across a Selenium question that is written in Java and sees that Bob wrote an answer in Python. This is an obvious case where the answer is not answering the question, right? Not so fast! It is common in the community of Selenium users to accept answers that are written in a language different from the one they use because the Selenium API is regular from language to language. If you know Java, it is fairly easy to translate the Python answer to working Java code. Then Alice sees a question in CoffeeScript and sees that Bob (damn Bob!) posted an answer in JavaScript. Obviously it is not answering the question! Again, not so fast! The CoffeeScript community regularly accepts answers written in JavaScript.
The Upshot
If you want to follow the policy as it is, then when you encounter an answer that looks like an answer in the LQ queue, and there's no other reason to delete it, then you hit "Looks Ok".
If you really don't like the answer and can't bring yourself to click "Looks OK", click "Skip".