Not just for data centers, several large biotechs setup similar, and a couple hospitals in my region. Some use all units same size, others have mix of sizes. One biotech just added a natural gas fueled unit for longer outages dues to PSP shutdowns.
Recent mine site had two larger units at 1600kW each, and a 450kW. During the day one or two large units run, after abut 11pm one large unit comes off line, then the small unit comes online and takes the load off the remaining large unit, then at about 0530, process goes other, large unit comes on, small units drops off, other large unit comes back on. If daytime load drops below load demand setpoint, then the second large unit will come off line. System was designed to meet their site load profiles and work schedules, modern controls sure make doing things like this a lot easier.
Some sites have what appears to be excessive capacity, there is a larger drug manufacturer here, average site load is about 4.8MW, when on emergency power the BMS system will trim non-essential loads so site runs about 3.4-3.6MW. When an outage occurs, all 5 2MW units start and come online, lots of extra capacity but helps deal with large inrush and starting loads, then as system stabilizes the load demand start stop becomes active and takes unneeded capacity offline.
Lots of ways to do it, just up to whoever is holding the purse most times.
MikeL