sim-2
Explanation
In this comic, a woman asks God whether we are all living in a simulation. God casually confirms it, saying "I think so, yeah." The woman then rattles off classic simulation-hypothesis arguments: the speed of light as a processing limit, quantum particles behaving differently when observed, the universe running on math that resembles discrete computation. God interrupts to clarify that the simulation is not humanity's -- God made this reality. The implication is that God, too, exists inside a simulation, and is offended by the suggestion that the universe is a crude computational hack, insisting "I'm a God, not a monster, Jane."
The humor works on multiple levels. First, it plays on the popular simulation hypothesis (associated with Nick Bostrom and much internet philosophy) by having God -- the traditional creator -- agree with the premise but reframe it. Second, the joke subverts expectations: you expect God to either deny the simulation or reveal a grand cosmic truth, but instead God is essentially a middle manager who built a reality inside someone else's simulation and is touchy about the quality of the work. The final line treats the simulation hypothesis as an insult to God's craftsmanship rather than a profound philosophical revelation.