In reply to Andy Sheridan:
That looks like the Mad Rock pad that I landed on a couple of times when trying a problem with someone else at the crag.
If it is the same pad, I wouldn't touch it with somebody else's bargepole. When landing close to the joins between the different sections, the join folded in offering almost no protection. It felt like an ankle injury would be the inevitable outcome if you used it for long. Imagine a hinged pad with large hinges every few inches.
It might have a function for flattening out landings when used below another layer of pads but it was useless as the top layer.
The Snap quarter pounder is good for filling in gaps; it is a large pad but it splits in to two so it has the versatility to be used as a decent sized normal pad or to fill in gaps for uneven landings or traverses. On the downside, its carrying system doesn't make it easy to carry gear folded inside the mat if you tend to do that.
Or maybe some of the designs with two or three folds that are popular in France.