Interesting, this looks quite a bit thinner than what I would say a more traditional (in the US at least) meat cleaver is. For many years, I often neglected the meat cleaver in whatever set of knives I had on my counter. I wasn't until recent years, when I started getting more and more into breaking down whole chickens myself, that I started using my meat cleaver more, and I will admit as well, I never realized how versatile these things truly are. One of the biggest advantages when cutting through bones and joints with it, is that it's a much sturdier blade and it has the weight to break through bones when whacking them with it.
But it also works fantastic for stuff like mincing cloves of garlic, dicing onions, chopping herbs, and more. The only thing I would hold back on using it for, would be stuff like really ripe tomatoes or any other soft items which could get damaged easily. Sometimes the blade of the cleaver itself is too thick, that it will break apart stuff like ripe tomatoes - especially if the blade hasn't been recently sharpened, and perhaps dulled a bit from cutting through a lot of bones/joints. Also, when cutting through things like hard cheeses, the thickness of the blade can also cause the cheese to split and fall apart, instead of maintaining a slice shape.