No I just said there are aspects of the simulator which God fulfils. Simulation theory tells us very little more about the simulator. Bostrom talks about windows etc.
The description of a simulator, I'd say, lies within the common understanding of the Christian God, but only constitutes a part of it.
You seem to be pretending that God has never been described in religion and theology as an intelligent designer who makes a universe from which he his separate and entirely independent. The simulator can never be less than that description which is also a theological description but it/he/she/ they could be more.
I'm not pretending anything of the sort, I've conceded that point repeatedly - I'm observing that to equate the two is to distinctly undersell the common understanding of 'God'.
What we are IMHO seeing then is you shuffling with the the goal posts.
And now you're pretending that you're humble, which is frankly even less believable
I've not moved any goal-posts at all, I've accepted the designer concept from the start as a part of the simulated universe hypothesis, I've just not accepted the implicit equivalence with the claim 'God'.
Is this in an attempt to eliminate God from access to the characteristics of a universe creator which has to be the Fred and Ginger, Busby Berkeley of God avoidance by claiming that God is somehow overqualified.
No, it's making the point that even if the simulated universe hypothesis were to be in some way validated or, for the sake of argument, accepted in principle, it still wouldn't be any sort of evidence for the Christian depiction of 'God'.
Other contributers seem to want to go the other way and have us believe that the creator is somekind of teenage dirtbag. Suggesting that any fool can create a universe like the one we've got.
Arguably, with the right digital tool-kit, any douche-bag could; that's, in part, why it's such an inadequate device with which to attempt to establish 'God'.
O.