Since there were some questions, I will present my evidence for god(s) and the logical conclusion to wish they lead. There are a few a great many assumptions involves that I find reasonable, but they may end up being wrong, mostly based on evidence reaching well beyond it's scope. Hence the low and almost completely random confidence states earlier and the susceptibility of it to changes in the evidence.
0) Gods are relative. Gods may or may not have their own creator deities, and may or may not consider themselves gods when compared to their creators (but might, when compared to their creations). Evidence, again, comes from our own experience with other humans, which may not hold and the fact that causal chains do not simply "stop", in our experience.
1) There are an infinite number of universes. This is the biggie - it's not needed for this calculation to hold, but the more universes there are the more likely it is to be true that our universe was created (and is potentially managed) by god(s). We know at least several universes exist, though, since we are able to fabricate them, but this assumption is relative to the number of universes that exist at our complexity level or greater.
2) We are able to fabricate inferior artificial universes. See: Dwarf Fortress. These have their own internal rules and logic, and while they certainly don't have the complexity of properties we'd associate with our own universe, I would argue they still manage to exist.
3) Each universe of sufficient complexity that contains intelligent life will contain at least one species that desires and eventually obtains the ability to fabricate somewhat complex artificial universes, containing "living" beings. Any universe without complex beings can be removed from our calculations (because we aren't in one of them) and this is justified for those primarily by the fact that universes are big (or at least ours is).
4) Any universe with the ability to create one such artificial universe will create more than one. Again, this seems reasonable - we rarely do things once, and it's unlikely we are the only race to ever exist.
5) From 3 and 4, one can deduce that the number of artificial universes will quickly dwarf the number of "natural" universes (should such a thing exist).
6) This is only compounded by the fact that artificial universes are those most likely to be conducive to the development life, mirroring the experience of an entity that exists in a universe that was clearly conducive to life.
7) This is compounded again by the fact that universes of sufficient complexity and fidelity should be capable of creating universes of sufficient complexity and fidelity to create universes capable of creating ours, and so on up the chain.
Conclusion: We most likely find ourselves within an artificial universe. We do, in fact, have gods, one or more depending on whether you consider the observer/programmer/button-flicker all equally gods - though we know nothing about them, and have no way of interacting with them. We have no idea what, if any, tools they have with which to observe us, if they've even noticed that in the entire universe our particular species exists, or interact with us. We have no idea what their morality is, what they find good or bad or humorous, or if they hold us, simple artificial beings, of being of any value. (again, if they've even noticed we exist)
Random supposition:
They might be entirely capricious, or distant observers only using us as educational models. They may be oblivious, having decided not to watch the universe's progress (yet) at all.
Any of their actions are, by definition, super natural - they are not governed by our universal laws, and they are likely not constrained by them in any interactions they might have with us. They can see and do anything, but might not, because like us they are merely mortal, and time and effort are precious and their intellect is not unlimited. They are, to us, effectively omniscient (they can see anything they wish to see, and if they keep logs, anything that ever was, and maybe even run and revert the whole thing, giving them knowledge of the future barring intervention) and omnipotent (they literally control everything - but this does not mean they are in absolute control, since like in sim games, such control would be an incredibly amount of effort for little reward.