Stack Overflow has a user base many, many times that of other Stack Exchange sites. On SO, you are likely to get more distinct eyes on your problem in the first 6 minutes than other sites can get in hours. It can lead to FGITW, where someone quickly whips up a solution to the problem that is mediocre, which gets upvotes (for being correct) and accepted, while someone writing a slower yet better answer is left in the dust. But I personally have answered a question 4 hours after the top answer. It had the checkmark, and I believe had 20+ votes. The checkmarked answer was also correct in technical detail and in presentation. So it wasn't a case of "no, you are wrong", but simply "I can word that better". The OP and other voters on the question agreed (mainly the OP actually: I think my answer was 3rd or 4th when the checkmark moved). It got the check, and eventually votes. Checkmarks are not irrevocable. Some of my highest "point" answers were on questions where the checked answer was obsolete or could be improved, ranging from minutes to hours to (in at least one case) [years](https://stackoverflow.com/a/31457319/1774667) behind the acceptance of the original answer. It doesn't always work. Sometimes the OP doesn't feel right about moving the check, or disagrees with how awesome your answer is. Sometimes the OP is long gone, and even if your answer is Hamilton-calibre you won't get the checkmark. But delayed checkmarks don't fix that either; it would just mean no answer has the check. It is true that it can take hours before a particular person or time zone sees your answer. But this is SO, there: there are very very few questions where only one person knows the answer to a given problem, or could write up a quality answer to it. I'm not seeing a serious problem. Maybe on low-traffic tags the 15 minute window is too tight, but a blanket change is not justified.