If anyone has read the explanation of those drop tests, he’s explicitly stated numerous times that he’s not testing just to simulate one hard fall, he is testing to simulate the multitude of smaller bumps, tweaks, vibrations, tipping over, etc (including maybe a fall or two) that comes with general heavier-duty use over a longer period of time, during a short test. Most testing is like this, the test itself is usually not designed to re-create one specific catastrophic failure event, it is a harsh test that is designed to compress, just for example, two years of use into an hour. It’s “what can I do in a short period of time that will predict a more-likely failure during general use at some unknown point in the future, or allow me to quickly differentiate between varying levels of long-term reliability”. A hard fall is not the problem. It may not be super convenient, but it’s easy to simply verify zero after a hard fall, because you can easily identify that a potentially damaging event happened. The problem is when things shift and there isn’t any one thing you can point to that caused it—you have nothing to tell you that there might be something wrong until after the fact, and you maybe just lost that opportunity. Murphy’s Law states that whatever can go wrong, will—the corollary to that is that when it does go wrong, it will happen at the most inopportune time. If you buy points for six years (or more) and plan a hunt during that time, do you really want to worry about your scope holding zero or returning to zero when you’re on a 1-week trip, four or 5 miles into the back country and you have a fleeting opportunity? Or are you going to quickly reach for your spare rifle in that situation?
If you have something you’ve used for a long time and you’ve basically proven it’s durability to yourself, great. But if buying something untested and you have the opportunity to get a product that is documented more durable, and that’s an important trait to you, why would you ignore it even if the test used may not represent the perfect picture of reality?