So considering that Core i7 has a small L Cashe (someone typed that from above) ... would it affect the processor or the speed it's choking on?
From benchmarks, seems like it's not that big a concern yet

How much cache you can fit on a particular processor die really depends on how much space you have left after putting in the other stuff.
Techreport.comThat's an image from techreport showing the i7's die. Notice how much space is taken up by the 8MB L3 cache. There isn't much space for each core, let alone to squeeze in even 256kB of L2 cache (in the bottom-right corner of each core, I think). Intel's new direction for multi-core processors is to have smaller L1 and L2 caches
(trying to find the exact article on Anandtech where they quote this from an interview with one of the Intel guys), and larger L3 caches instead. Here's an
old link to Anandtech discussing this.
Large L1/2s make sense for processors with fewer cores, but as you scale up the number of processors you'll increasingly find that they need to access information that is only available on the caches of other cores (generally speaking, the L1/2 cache of each core is not accessible to the other cores. There are some exceptions, like the Core 2 Quad series where L2 was shared between 2 cores).
Accessing information on another core's cache takes a long time, so a more sensible solution would be to have a larger shared L3 cache, and smaller exclusive L1/2 cache. This explains why they made the L3 cache inclusive (i.e. L3 also contains data stored in L1 and L2).
Why the hell did someone give it a 1? That person needs to be smacked. XD
Most people who rate stuff 1 on Newegg are people who got DOA parts, lol. Dunno about his particular case; some of them are failed overclockers who vent their frustrations on Newegg, too.