(This may be a dumb question and I just haven't been paying attention

)Film manufacturers battle to make finer grained films but how come we don't try to make fine grain paper? Was this ever a discussion? Am I nuts? Does paper have grain like film? I would think it does since it is almost like another negative....
Prior to development, paper grain averages around 0.1-0.2 microns. This makes it about 10% the size of film grain, which ranges from about 0.6-2.0 microns, depending on film speed. Neither of it is visible to the naked eye.
What we 'see' after development, and usually refer to as 'grain', are development clusters of metallic silver. These clusters are highly irregular in shape and hard to define by a single dimension, but as far as I know, also much smaller in paper than in film.
I think, there is simply no need for paper grain to be any smaller than it is, and the consequence of a smaller grain would be (as it is with film) a reduction in speed. Probably not worth it.