According to the answers to this question, the reason why it requires two reviewers to approve or reject an edit is to not rely on one single user who may not be paying attention to judge if the edit is good or bad. So if you were paying attention but the other reviewers were not, feel free to rollback (if they approved a bad edit like in this case) or to make the edit yourself (if the rejected a good edit).
There are a lot of robo-reviewers who approve everything they see just for the badges. As Lundin pointed out, it seems like the users who approved this edit seem to be robo-reviewers, which means that they approved the edit just to review quickly to get badges and not because they really think it's a good edit. You were paying attention and noticed that the edit was useless, which is good, so it's perfectly OK for you to roll back that edit.
In this specific case, I don't really think that the edit does too much harm, even though it's completely useless. I would probably have rejected it as "no improvement whatsoever", but I might not have bothered to roll it back. But if you think that it's bad enough that it needs to get rolled back, you're welcome to do so. It's a bad edit, but I've seen worse edits get approved, and I rolled them back.
The most recent example of me rolling back a bad edit that got approved is this edit, which I found by looking at the review history of one of the users who approved the edit that you mentioned. This edit adds code formatting
to keywords such as "Ubuntu 16" and "96 rows 2 columns" even though this is against the rules. The user who approved it "improved" it to add code formatting to "MATLAB" which is equally bad, so I rolled back both edits.
A few months ago, I rejected another edit that abused code formatting and the edit later got approved, so I rolled it back. I think I also flagged for moderator attention so that a moderator could review ban the users who approved the edit and override the approval on other similar bad edits by that user that got approved.
I think it's also happened once that I saw a good edit getting rejected, so I made the edit myself. But that situation is a lot more rare, probably because it's faster to approve an edit than to reject it so robo-reviewers prefer approving edits.
So if you see a bad edit getting approved, it's perfectly OK to roll it back, it's even good if you do so. Additionally, if you see a really bad edit getting approved and you can find evidence on Meta and/or in the help center that such edits are considered bad, you might also want to flag for moderator attention so that a moderator can take appropriate actions against the user who suggested the edit and the users who approved it.