Brick veneer doesn't stand up to earthquakes too well. I lived only 3 miles from the epicentre of the 2011 Christchurch earthquake and on all my neighbour's houses the brick veneer pretty much just peeled away from the side of the house. However, the wooden frames behind the brick veneer generally stood up pretty well and there were no catastrophic collapses.
Oh yes Chch was a real mess 10 yrs back and we felt bad for anyone that went though that.
We all learned about liquefaction from that.
A few years back my neighbor whom has a piling business set up some gear down there to help with the rebuild and I did dozens of week long trips to Chch as his groundman installing up to 12m piles with a big vibrator on a 22t excavator. Lots of residents were still very jumpy at any vibration and we often had to calm them as the gear we had produced a lot of vibrationary power @ ~2k/cycles/min.
Yep seen the carnage and helped a bit to fix it.
You mention timber framed buildings, yes they stood up far better however some of the crappy ground strata in some suburbs was mostly the cause of the building damage as it acted like jelly when the quakes hit.
Over near Jade stadium the ground was real poo and with the bedrock closer to the surface the vibrations we produced did some strange shit where neighbors had little shaking as we worked yet someone a few 100 yds away got pummeled to where stuff wouldn't stay on a table.
Chch fair rewrote the NZ building foundation legislation to even here in Auckland 1500km away requirements have roughly doubled.
Edit to add
Piling a job of 500 4.8m timber piles we vibe'd outta sight in 2 days ! Not far from the old Jade stadium.
300 in, 200 to go.