Yes, the three-segmented plugs are an identifier of Leaderflush doors. It means nothing more than "this door has been manufactured by Leaderflush"
Leaderflush, like all the responsible door manufacturers belong to an independent third party certification scheme. This requires them to test their doors to current standards (BS EN 1634-1 to be CE-marking ready). The test house then provides them (at the moment) with parameters within which they can manufacture the tested doorset (otherwise you are stuck selling only what you have tested - size, configuration etc).
I am not aware of a fire door currently on the market that has passed even the BS476: Part 22 test for 30 minutes without an intumescent seal and the European test is certainly no easier.
With regard to 20 minute doors - there used to be some dead dodgy 'evidence' against the BS476: Part 8: 1972 test (showing my age here) but certainly from my experience of watching endless tests, you're lucky if, under furnace conditions, you get even 15 minutes without a seal. Best performances are gained when the leaf/frame gap is almost non-existent - and when did you last see that, consistently on a site?
Doorstops are virtually irrelevant. Where fire seals are fitted, you don't need a doorstop (see the number of double swing doorsets that have successfully passed the fire test). Where a doorstop is fitted, size matters chaps! The bigger it is, the easier it is for the fitter to make a rubbish job of hanging the door, getting paid and cantering off into the sunset before anyone notices. I favour a small, but perfectly formed 6mm doorstop, just to stop the leaf swinging through the frame for a single action door. The chippy will have had to make the door fit pretty well or it will swing straight through - so the gap is going to be probably 3mm or less. And what are we looking for? about 3mm! QED.