Most of the "100W" bulbs I have been finding are "100W Equivalent" halogen and only eat 72 Watts.
I did find a 100W Large Globe. (I like large, not small, for lower burn hazard).
> Will that be sufficient or does it have to be 100W?
Depends what you are running, and how you want to test it. ANY lamp will prevent wall-wire fire if your amp is dead-short. If you want to see the amp "run" (poorly due to low voltage) the lamp should be bigger than the amp's total power (not output power). Since even a Champ runs over 50 Watts, a 72W will starve it, and you won't get even a decent partial-voltage test (the tube heaters may not get hot enough to loosen any electrons). I'd go 100W on small amps and 150-200W on large amps.
FWIW: I have a "37 Watts" duct fan which is too loud and blows too much. I tried a 40W lamp in series but it hardly ran. I tried a 72W halo and it is nearly there. I tried a true 100W lamp and it was too much (for my purpose). I'm back with the 72W. I may end up with a mess of resistors; but I like the lamp because it will pass a big starting current cold then fade-back as the filament heats. The "72W" glows like a 7W Xmas bulb, and the 100W I can hardly see glow.
150W and 200W plain incandescent lamps are readily available at Home Despot, so I am sure Lowes has them. I use them in my garage, where the total running hours does not justify a more efficient lamp, and the instant-on and stray heat is a bonus on cold dark days.