I am preparing a suggestion to rework the review queues icon to indicate various levels of pending reviews, "battery indicator style". The state of such an icon can be refreshed at a rate that turns out acceptable performance-wise - once in 1 or 5 or 10 etc hours.
Here is a sketch of how it is supposed to look like:
(The tooltip text is naturally expected to reflect the respective icon, saying something like "low number of pending reviews", "high number of pending reviews" etc)
The problem is, I haven't been much into review matters lately and can't figure what would be reasonable per-queue values to differentiate low from medium from high here. Something like, 5 - 50 - 500?
Limits for close queue look particularly tricky. There seem to be always high demand, and if indication is done in a straightforward way then 3K users will have indicator always "high", that would be practically useless.
Per my estimate there are about 95 thousands 3K users (out of about 440 thousands eligible for various reviews starting at 500 rep points) - it doesn't look wise to have unusable indicator for such a large amount of reviewers.
Also, if there are folks active in reviewing at smaller sites, I would be interested to learn whether our values at SO would do fine over there or I better propose them to be configured separately.
Here is a background story for those interested. These old popular posts are strongly related:
Is the top bar redesign the sole cause of the suggested edit slowdown?
Suggested edits have fallen off dramatically since roughly the week of February 13. That's when the new top navigation bar went live... This seems to indicate to me that the new navigation bar is the primary cause of the suggested edit queue hitting its cap on a regular basis...
Frankly, I would prefer things to just totally revert to the old way with displaying the number of pending reviews rather than this battery-style stuff.
While total recall is not done though, I decided to propose some compromise approach that doesn't impact the rest of screen estate and that can be easily adapted to meet whatever performance-related limitations could be blocking recovery of old proven solutions.