As I pointed out. Once you propose a creative agent outside of the universe you have no real sanction on how ''supernatural'' this is.
'Supernatural' is another meaningless word without a proper definition.
You cannot specify therefore if it is necessary or contingent.
Indeed. So defining
any universe simulator(s) as 'god', means that you have excluded any questions of contingency versus necessity and the question of the basis of existence (Feser) from the definition; not to mention any moral element, any afterlife, any of the omnis, any connection to any 'holy book', and so on, and so on. A universe simulator
might have any of those characteristics but by applying the label to
any simulators, specifically excludes all those things from the definition. As and aside you also never answered the question of
how much of a universe has to be simulated before the simulator becomes 'god' - which makes the term even less meaningful.
The label 'God' has become far too vague to have a meaningful discussion about it; it's just rather comical nonsense. Unless you have a
specific definition, then any discussion is impossible, as is any idea that anybody is doing any 'dodging'.