Well, that's quite an uninteresting title. Many of you might be thinking, why would we even need such a thing, well hear me out...
Now, I probably won't be the only one who will be surprised by a following factoid.
Recently I did re-read the guide to triage queue and there was this one detail that completely escaped my memory upon my initial read.
First, there's a bit of a special case here: Duplicates. A clear, well-written question might still be a duplicate, and the last thing you want to do is to dispute Duplicate flags by choosing Looks OK if it is a duplicate. So always read the comments first: scroll to the end of the question, and if you see "Possible duplicate" in the list, either mark it as a duplicate yourself (if you can confirm that the comment is accurate) or Requires Editing if the author has provided some clarification in the comments but hasn't yet edited the post; choose Looks OK only if you're certain the question is not a duplicate. As always, Skip is a fine option here if you simply don't want to take the time to look at duplicates.
Now yes, technically this is my fault for not being more attentive and memorizing this, but when you're new to reviews you get possibly quite overwhelmed with all the new things and guides.
My point is a smart & good design should not account for user's responsibility. But it should follow, one of my favourite corporate buzzwords - poka-yoke - or in normal speech - be foolproof! Especially when the issue at hand is potentially so easy to fix.
I'm thinking something along the lines of something simple and intuitive like this:
Obviously, just an illustration. Design/content is subject to change
I feel like it fits in naturally and mentions a very important information people might otherwise overlook or be straight up not aware of. And even if people are aware of the fact, how they should judge the 'duplicate triage reviews, if you're clogging through them, there still is a good chance you might overlook a comment about it by accident.
It's not intrusive, it teaches newer users and it even helps veterans make better decisions