I strongly believe that the universe we are in is one created and run by an intelligent 3rd party.
But unlike 99.9% of the people who share that belief, I happen to also believe that this 3rd party was itself created from evolutionary processes in a world that was not created.
It's a belief that seems to go back at least to the 3rd century CE, but centers around the notion that a chaotic universe where life evolved without design (an idea at least as old as Leucretius in 50 BCE) would eventually create life sophisticated enough to be able to create worlds itself, and that we are in the re-creation of such a universe at an earlier point in time.
One of the wildest aspects of that belief in antiquity was its focus on the notions of Greek atomism and matter being made up of indivisible parts as an indicator of its claim of being in a copy of a higher fidelity original. Especially given that a central component of my own belief in this topic relates to the similarity between quantum behaviors (indivisible parts of matter) and hacks we have started using in building procedurally generated voxel based virtual worlds.
It's the kind of thinking that upsets theists by presenting an answer that is deeply at odds with a belief in supernatural origins of existence, and that upsets atheists self-assured in their disbelief of any possible creator.
When a discussion is broadly divided into two camps, claiming both are wrong isn't destined to win popularity contests.
My favourite that kinda falls in that category is that a "designed world / controlled universe" failed; was about to be completely destroyed. they realized it soon enough, so they encoded...encrypted ALL their knowledge into different media (dna, quantum stuff, etc. and idk) then put that into meteorites etc. and catapulted it out in all directions of the great nothingness, in the hopes that at some point it will land somewhere where it can cause a chain reaction (evolution) that will lead to a being, that is capable to restore the encoded knowledge.