I'm trying to help the community by reviewing via the various review queues. Sometimes, I am wrong, even if I only vote for languages and frameworks that I know. I see it when I am the only one to select a decision. So I'm searching why other users chose another decision so I can improve my understanding. When I don't know what to do, I click <kbd>Skip</kbd> button. I understood that this is the best solution for the community. But, sometimes, it's not helpful for me. I don't learn anything. I read this [answer](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/310030/should-i-be-reviewing-questions-answers-outside-my-skill-set): > You may not be able to learn enough to review every post accurately, but that doesn't mean you can't try; often, a little bit of research is all that it takes, and the knowledge you gain will serve you well in the future. I agree and I think it could be useful for beginners to know what more experienced users answered. Currently, if I want to know what other users voted, the only solution is too "try, vote and look at the decisions of others". I don't think it is a good way to help the community. So may I suggest adding a <kbd>I don't know</kbd> button? For the community, it would work like the <kbd>Skip</kbd> button but it wouldn't count as a decision. The inexperienced user who clicked on it, would be able to review this question, but would be able to see what other users have chosen.