pull down to refresh

which means the new blocks propagate more slowly across the network.
Which in turn trends towards miner centralization, given the greater head start to the miner of the last block. This is one of the heaviest arguments against actually bigger blocks.
What I find most interesting is that this is quietly the final scaling frontier. Since throughput is already unlimited, and ownership is a result of fee-relative supply divided by distribution, lots of scale scammers are going to cope hard because lower chain fees drastically shrinks the market for their their centralized shadowchains.