When I got 2000 points, I got these Review queues in the right top corner with a number of available reviews.
Is it my responsibility now? Should I do them? Or is it completely voluntary?
If I do, what does it give me back? Which advantages?
When I got 2000 points, I got these Review queues in the right top corner with a number of available reviews.
Is it my responsibility now? Should I do them? Or is it completely voluntary?
If I do, what does it give me back? Which advantages?
Or it's completely voluntary?
Correct.
If I do, what does it give me back? Which advantages?
A cleaner site, where you can find good stuff easier as there is less cruft and bad stuff.
Also, there are the following badges for reviewing:
... what does it give me back? Which advantages?
The Reviewer and Steward badges related to these statistics in those review queues seem to be taken into account (only once ...) to calculate the Candidate Score, which are used as some sort of indicator for participants in moderator elections I believe (while the Custodian badge seems to be ignored for that).
These review queues statistics may also help to decide about nominees for Moderators Pro Tempore on beta sites.
Another advantage of such reviews is that in the first / late review queues you often see posts from brand new users, which gives you a chance to help them to get going if you see any of the typical mistakes from new users (more or less around the time the mistake happens) ... If that's what you like doing of course, e.g via whatever kind of constructive comments to challenge them to improve their posts.
I think @Oded's point about keeping the site "clean" is a major reason behind it.
Take a look at how many questions there are in the top tags (e.g. C#, Java) at peak hours - as I write this, it's almost 11:30 at night in the Midwestern U.S. and 12:30 AM on the East Coast (hardly peak hours), and yet some Java questions that were written a little over half an hour ago are no longer on the first page. The fact is, given the question volume on Stack Overflow, it's not necessarily all that easy to get attention for even a well-written question; this problem would be much worse if bad questions weren't being removed.
Even if individual review efforts don't seem to make that much of a difference, keep in mind that there's a strong broken windows effect that amplifies both community policing efforts and a lack thereof, so it can make more of a difference than you'd initially think. Quite simply, bad questions attract more bad questions if they're not addressed promptly - same for bad answers, actually.
If reputation is what you're really interested in, instead of just badges and altruism (which are more or less what existing answers are primarily describing), I have found that the queues are a pretty good place to find new questions that need decent answers. It's probably not the most efficient way to find such questions, but it's not bad either.
Additionally, if you're the kind of person who just likes to surf around on Stack Overflow, like I am, it provides a little bit more of a richer experience when puttering around for a few minutes.