Answering two posts at the same time as their questions are related

The problem with this experiment is that it is difficult to predict the recovery part without knowing the reason for the drop [...] How would you define recovery?
While I’m of the opinion that recovery is likely, the duration shouldn’t be underestimated, this is because Bitcoin has grown to a certain level whereby reducing down to $1000 will be a very massive drop, and somehow history has some record of how long recovery took when Bitcoin seem do drop to such levels.
We're of course talking about a very unlikely event, but the most likely scenario for a drop to $1000 is a multi year bear market with several of the "triggers" I mentioned in the OP (Saylor bankruptcy, US & El Salvador (?) selling ...) occurring at the same time or in a short sequence, and some may also be a consequence of this crash. For example, Terra/Luna and FTX were triggered by a price drop and deepened the 2022 bear market.
Even if we had a "normal" bear market which lasts more than 1,5 years with lower lows, it is possible that this bear goes deeper in price than what everybody expects just
because of the duration of the bear. Bitcoin never experienced a multi year bear market like gold did for example, and the reaction to a 2-3 year bear could be that the sentiment turns into a "now Bitcoin isn't recovering anymore! is it dead now?" and doom prophets will have their heyday.
This is the main scenario I have for a fall to $1000. For a flash crash, $1000 is too far away, the lowest I could imagine for a "normal" crash in less than a year is maybe the FTX lows (15k$) or at most $10,000.
So there must be some extreme negative sentiment for the market to reach this price, and until that builds up, it would take some time.
But even taking this into account, $1000 may be an extreme undervaluation. It's likely in this case that every negative news event or bankruptcy triggers a new low every couple of months (e.g. from a "normal crash level of 50k" down to 30k, then 20k). Things could accelerate a bit if the FTX low from 2022 is broken (15,500$) and $10,000 could also be a point with massive liquidations and take us to $5000, and then a final liquidation wave flashcrashes down to $1000.
In such a scenario I would also expect first a fast recovery to 2-5k. Once this happens, discussions will start about if Bitcoin is really dead and what will happen. I think the recovery then depends largely on the way the community acts.
A good example for a very adversial scenario where the community was able to create organic growth is the Monero crash from 2024 when it got delisted from several exchanges. They built up decentralized swapping services and the price was able to recover and even hit a new ATH. This was only an ~80% drop but the sentiment in the community was "terminal fear" during some time.
Of course I shouldn't compare Bitcoin to an altcoin, but if Wall Street has exited, and Bitcoin recovers with a similar "community-driven development", e.g. with technologies like Lightning and decentralized exchanges being strengthened, then I see good chances that even after a $1000 crash it could quite fastly recover. Maybe conquering $10k again in a year or so, and then go to current price levels again once the sentiment becomes overwhelmingly positive. And from the current price level an ATH is only less than a doubling away.
For a "recovery" I would mean a return to the 2021-25 price range (roughly 20k-125k).