I think it’s much less likely to happen for most Linux distros. CrowdStrike is a 3rd party antivirus/security vendor whose products have deep access into the Windows system and are updated directly by CrowdStrike themselves.
Linux distros (and their users) tend to install the bulk of their software from the distros own repos, which are usually subject to testing before entering the stable repos. Flatpaks etc are sandboxed.
There aren’t any significant Linux anti-virus products (ClamAV searches for Windows viruses and doesn’t have the system access that Windows antivirus products do).
My one caveat is rolling distros such as Arch (and Endeavour) where less testing takes place before rollout. An example would be the GRUB issue last year.
This problem likely wouldn’t have hit most other Linux distros because of the amount of testing a GRUB update would go through before rollout to their stable versions.