Remember that work done is force times distance over which it is applied. So if you fix the force, the gain in kinetic energy depends entirely on the distance over which it acts. If the particle is moving faster, it covers that distance faster, so acquires kinetic energy faster, but the total kinetic energy acquired will be the same if you fix the distance. Or, if you fix the time the force acts, then the faster particle will cover more distance, hence gain more kinetic energy from that same force. So it all depends on what you are keeping fixed. In the case of a freely falling cloud, the force is not constant, it rises like 1/r2 as the radius r of the cloud contracts. But you end up with a gain in kinetic energy like 1/r anyway, regardless of how fast the contraction occurs, so that's more like the fixed force over the fixed distance. But also, in a collapsing cloud, the size of the force depends on the mass of the cloud, so you end up finding that more massive clouds, contracting to the same r, acquire faster speeds, regardless of how fast they get there (though it is true, as Bandersnatch said, that the higher mass cloud, starting from the same initial R, will get to any given r in less time). So that's why Bandersnatch discouraged you from thinking in terms of how long it takes-- the work depends on the force and the distance, not how long the distance gets covered.