Based on Review bans should escalate beyond 30 days, which was a feature requested by a Stack Overflow moderator, the developers just added longer bans, both for automatic suspensions and manually mod suspensions.
To quote the relevant points from bluefeet's answer
...Not only can you hand out longer bans, we've also adjusted the way automatic bans are handed out to users who fail audits. When calculating the automatic length of the ban, we check to see when the last ban ended and determine the new length based on the following requirements:
- If the time since the last ban ended is less than or equal to 30 days, then the new ban is double the length of the last one. This is not capped, meaning if the last ban was for 365 days, then the new one is 730.
- If the time since the last ban ended is greater than 30 days, then the new ban is half the length of the last ban or 2 days - whichever is greater.
This should help with reviewers who continually fail audits and need extended time away from reviewing. It also allows moderators to 'reset' the ban length by handing out a ban of any length, which would then be used by the automatic calculation of time-off.
Since you seem to be well versed in the traditional cycle that ended with a 30-day review ban, you have a significant history of audit failures within the last 30 days, so the system instituted a longer ban for you (basically doubling of the 30-day ban). This also means that when you come back from reviewing, if you trigger another review ban in the next 30 days, it will be 120 days since your current one is 60-days.
This new mechanism completely replaces the old one, so this means the old cycle of 2 -> 7 -> 30 days -> reset
is gone. Instead it is replaced by a new neverending one (assuming you keep failing within 30 days of getting the review privileges back: 2 -> 4 -> 8 -> 16 -> 32 -> 64 -> 128 days ->....
.
This new mechanism grows more slowly (assuming a mod doesn't manually apply a longer ban at any point in the cycle) taking 5 bans to reach a month long review ban, but is much harsher otherwise since the window between failures is longer and doesn't max out or reset.
The second bullet in bluefeet's answer is also very relevant (source). There is no timed "get out of jail free card" on your suspension length. If you were banned from reviewing, and it was more than 30 days ago, your next suspension period will be half of the previous, regardless of when that previous suspension was (so your review history today could have an impact on an suspension 12 months from now). An extended period of good reviews won't completely erase the poor review history you have, so it is important to try to learn from your mistakes as early as possible to avoid getting into a deep trap of long bans that may be difficult to recover from.