So we all agree the big bang was what started the universe before time, space and matter. And the big bang came to be due to a spark. Who created said spark I wonder
The problem is that thinking of a god as a human-like, self aware life form doesn't make sense in the context you just described.
If we're talking about a world where there is nothing at all except said "God", where does this god comes from? And the one before that? And so on.
And more importantly, even if you consider that God is an eternal being that was always there somehow, how do you explain his awareness, way of thinking?
Our consciousness as humans is born through language. Everything we think, feel, imagine, we do it through words. Even when you're not talking, just thinking, you're thinking through words that you learned, language is what helps you build a structure of your vision of the world, how to organize and view things. Try thinking without a language, that will be hard.
This is also why animals are so different from us, and if they started talking like us, they wouldn't stay in their current primal way of life, they would change, because their consciousness would change, evolve.
Now, in a world where only god exists, how can he creates a world, materialize concepts, ideas, to create everything that we know, without a consciousness? How can a god portrayed as a human-like life form (but god-like) can exists when it's the only thing existing at one point in time? That's just not possible, because for that to exists, it needs a context.
The only "god" concept I can understand, similar to how Descartes initially described, is some kind of power in the universe that led to creation of thing, this power being... a set of mathematics rules that made everything possible, which is just... science and nature.
Science and nature can be very mystery and be considered as some kind of power beyond our understanding, but thinking of a god as a regular but powerful guy, up there in the sky, who you can talk to and who understands you, doesn't make sense when you start thinking about the context of everything.
Also, related to this thread, the games I usually avoid for "moral" reasons, are epic exclusives because I don't like their policies on their store and their stance on exclusivity and many other things, not sure if that's really a "moral" thing though, more like customer preferences.