These are usually marketed as garage lights due to many a new build garage lacking fixtures beyond a ceiling-mounted duplex outlet (for a garage door opener) and perhaps an Edison socket. The 'deformable' feature allows for crude distribution control from the latter as well as some potential to fit the former.
Trend seems to have started with these Bell+Howell "Triburst" things with three flaps, 4000 lumens. They're up to four and five flaps, have seen one at 8000 lumens...a bit crazy.
Light should work for garages as you say, large basements etc. otherwise seems like way too much light for common indoor use. Ones I have seen are non-dimmable, no easy way to reduce the output.
A reservation of mine is the non-replaceable LEDs. Who knows how long it will hold up despite claims of run life. When it fails it likely goes out in the garbage (or e-waste). You can likely get something suitable and lower powers, with individual bulbs with appropriate socketing e.g. Y adapter.
I opened up a 3-flap 6000 lumen 60W light, found it uses a type of linear driver which switches LED substrings on/off depending on the instantaneous voltage. That is one way to manage overhead. Chip is "Bright Power" BP5336H (3 per flap) driving 33 LEDs. The OP's light has only 15 LEDs, may or may not use similar scheme, or just straight linear regulator.
Dave