The important thing is a center that's tonally matched (same crossover frequency and drivers) and ideally you want it to be the exact same speaker, but...
As long as it has Auto-calibration, your surround receiver or prepro will set channel trims based on the distance and sensitivity.
So if your center is 3db too quiet at 12 ft away compared to your L/R, it will set a +3db trim so that your center gets a slight bit more voltage going to it.
Hell, never mind sensitivity, some people
1) Have their centers hooked up to the receiver's amp and the L/R mains hooked up to a separate receiver (although I'd personally look for a 3ch amp for the whole front soundstage)
2) have a tonally matched center with much lower impedance. IE Usher S525 (4 ohm nominal) and S520(8ohm nominal).
That center is 88 dB @ 1 watt / 1m
86 dB @ 1 watt / 1m
However that so-called sensitivity spec above as it is written is an efficiency spec, not sensisitivy (which would db/ 2.83V rms / 1 m).
In other words, the stereo pair is getting a current of 0.35 amperes for a power of 1 watt in order to get 86 db and the center is getting a current of .50 and a voltage of 2.0 V to get 88db. On THAT note though, the above sensitivity could just be improperly labeled. In that case, it should have been in db/2.83V rms / 1m in the first place.
OTHERWISE, when the receiver sends a test tone to each speaker, the center will probably sound reasonably louder than the stereo pair, however it will also put more stress on the receiver's amp section in the process.
That's why some amps might be listed at 200w @ 8 ohm and 400w @ 4 ohm - the output voltage would be the same though! Er I just went off on a tangent there.
My point is, even identically matched center speakers can vary significantly from the mains and surrounds in the same line - but level matching solves that. Just make sure that every speaker you plan to use - not JUST the mains - has a nominal impedance your receiver/amp can handle.