One, you claimed many gods, I asked you if man is a god--if man IS a god, your materialism is void.
Well, there are imaginary humans, and I guess they can be gods; but there are real humans and we have no definition of a real god, so the question is no more answerable in real terms that eg 'Are humans pzetbraps?'
Two, Definition of God--can alter natural law at will
Three familiar points arise from that. First, if the ability to alter natural laws is the defining quality of God, then if we humans ever crack the code, will you worship us? I won't, but you're the worshiping kind, so what will you do?
Second, at present the ability to alter natural laws is an imaginary quality, so it only works for an imaginary god.
Third, unless you can tell us HOW God can alter natural laws, then all you're talking about is magic, and magic in the absence of an explanation of how magic works explains nothing. Which fits nicely with the proposition that gods are imaginary.
(Satan needs God's permission).
Yes, I agree that if God is omnipotent then Satan can only ever do what God wants [him] to do ─ hence that as the bible says, all things, good and evil both, must come from God, since there's no other possible source.