As mentioned its a very slow grower, and benefits heavily from supplemental feeding. The polyps divide while it grows, but they are also capable of budding off at the base of the polyp.
I actually have a picture that shows both types of growth, from 2014, while my Favia was recovering from a disaster that resulted in bleaching and die-off a couple of years earlier.
Towards the middle left you can actually see a polyp that is in the process of dividing, there is still a shared outed wall, but the mouths have separated and there is a barrier froming between them. Towards the right hand side of the colony and bottom, you can see a few smaller, ill-fitting polyps that have budded off, from the base of the surviving polyps.
This is the same colony in 2024, 10 years later, before and after moving from my 15g to my 25.
Seen from above, it's nearly a perfect orb.
Heres a side view, has a bit of a mushroom like foot, made up of the old skeleton seen in the first picture.