1. What is your understanding of infinity? Recycling? Or it just goes on forever?
2. I hypothesize that our universe is a type of simulation - I don't think it's the purest type. For one, we die in this simultation; so take death as the measure by which it is impure.
Who created our universe was likely a member of a confederation, or the confederation itself, of some intelligent species of a purer simulation.
3. I'm not saying God at all; God-like, maybe, but definitely not the first mover; likely someone far down the line in existence; one who actually did the science for 'big bang technology'.
4. There's a lot of information to be gathered from this universe, especially if you can keep a tab on it all. I believe energy parasites mine species, and memorize as much data as they can take from the universe. How this improves simulation is obvious; new vessel types, new environments, etc. And even if it was just for pleasure, I'm sure the fact that waste sense is picked up and artistic frames are made; think about how high quality a focal point in our vision is - good photo potential.
I said I'm not saying beauty is all. I already know what you said.
5. God is known as the soul one, where does it say in the bible " and God did science for the big bang. " Further, a member of a species who had lived a long time before even thinking about the big bang, is not God. God-like, sure.
1. When talking about the physical cosmos, I take infinity to mean "no end or edges". The use of "recycling" would imply endless time as in bang, expansion, contraction, bang, etc. Combing the two gets complicated.
2. For the universe to be a simulation, then there must be something outside of it and therefore it cannot be actually infinite even if we see it as so. Since we have no evidence of something outside of the universe, you are just assuming so for the sake of building up a coherent cosmology that you like.

Similarly, by assuming that the Bible is true and factual, some Christians have built a world view that sustains their faith. We all do it, even atheists. They make particular assumptions about the universe and build on those foundation blocks. I don't know what a "pure" simulation is and why a simulated death would matter at all. In some games that simulate real and not so real worlds, characters die. In some games or versions of those games, they are actually dead; in others they are reborn to live again. By definition, a simulation is a fake thing. Not real outside of its fake environment. Seeing our universe as "snow globe" on the desk of some alien can be fun, but it is mostly a common, but silly, sci fi theme.
3. Building backwards from your view of the universe leads you to these kinds of essentially useless endeavors that are necessary to support your argument. Who created the creator etc.
4. When you build a simulated world, you put in all the data and unless there is randomness, there is nothing new to learn. All you learn is whether or not the sim runs well. With randomness all you can learn is how random events effect the activity in the sim. Only if folks outside the sim universe are participating can you learn new things, and those new things will be about the participants and not the sim.
5. God means lots of different things to lots of different people. there is not a one size fits all answer to defining god.
Your case for us living in a simulation is not very convincing yet.
