After he finished arranging his movie/tv show collection, an action that took all of seven seconds, he arranged the rest of his equipment around the cave, including his replicator. [i]Let the people become Atheists when they hear the creation stories all of the other gods will tell them. At least my method of creation is based on science.[/i] He booted it up and loaded his planet-building simulator, which was in no way a knockoff. There, he drew a mountain range on the southern half of his continent, a few hundred kilometers from the shore, and let it curve up on the western side by a bit. He then stuck two craters near the bend, then put asteroids made of Adamantium and Vibranium in them. [i]Let's let the people figure that one out when there aren't even any asteroids in the universe.[/i] He added random metal deposits across the planet, including a few fictional metals like Orichalcum as a gift to the other gods, making sure that they could reject his changes at any time. When he was done messing with the landscape, he loaded a few creature designs he had been working on. Nanite-built robot creatures, of course, as he [i]was[/i] the god of science. [i]For now, I'll just add a couple of basics, like cute little robot dogs. Yeah, they'll be androgynous, and every 10,000 backflips they'll reproduce. Their natural enemies will be, I know, the Woccas. Yellow ball creatures with pie-slice mouths that slide around trying to eat everything that they can put in their mouths. They'll be really weak if you hit their tops or sides, so they won't be too powerful. Reproduce every time they eat their body mass worth of food, no, like ten times, or a hundred. Wouldn't want them to breed too quickly. Add a bit of randomness and gene crossover so evolution works, and voila! I've got a basic ecosystem.[/i] He thought for a while, then added some robotic insects and birds, plus bats for his cave, and robo-plants for them to live off of. When he was satisfied with his progress thusfar he hit the "replicate" button and let the machine work. When, a few minutes later it was done, he left his cave, nodding at the mechanical bats overhead, and flew over to the center of the continent. [i]One more thing, just to see how the mortals handle it.[/i] He produced a copy of all of the "Star Wars" movies and books, put them on an eternal-battery powered tablet PC, and buried it under a 20 meter tall obsidian statue of Jabba the Hutt. If that wouldn't get them interested in Science Fiction, he didn't know what would.