When I'm in the **review queues**, I'm diligent about **upvoting existing comments** that provide important and relevant feedback to the author. (This also happens automatically if you [duplicate canned review comments](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/296256/3025856).) The goal is to add weight to existing feedback in hopes that it's taken seriously. The problem is that there's also a [**daily limit of 30 comment votes**](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/256384/limits-on-upvoting-comments). I suspect that's reasonable for most contributors. If you're diligently upvoting existing feedback while reviewing 20-40 posts in 2-3 queues each day, however, you'll hit this with some regularity. Given this, I'd like to suggest either: 1. Establish a _separate limit_ for comment votes in the review queues, or 2. Increase the comment vote limit for _all_ contributors to e.g. 80 votes (if not more). The former is more targeted to this problem, and would have the least spillover effects. But it also seems like a lot of extra engineering (as detailed by [@Makyen in the comments](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/410631/raise-upvote-limit-for-comments-in-review-queue#comment859038_410631)) for a comparatively small set of contributors. As such, the latter would be dramatically easier, while still [safeguarding against automated abuse](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/256403/3025856) (assuming that's the primary reason for this limit). I acknowledge that this probably only affects a really small percentage of contributors. But I'd argue that we should _encourage_ reviewers to upvote useful feedback, and this limit can restrict that effort. > **Edit:** As highlighted by [@zcoop98 in the comments](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/410631/raise-upvote-limit-for-comments-in-review-queue#comment859008_410631), raising the vote limit would _also_ be really useful here on Meta Stack Overflow as well, since these questions often end up with more comments than answers. Is this too marginal of a gain to provide much benefit to the community? Are there other opportunities for abuse I'm overlooking?