The first thing that is necessary when creating a valid scientific hypothesis is that the hypothesis is necessarily falsifiable. And I have never heard hypothesis for testing that a God exists that is. Usually they fail when they try to define God. Feel free Ginger to come up with one that doesn't start out with false premises or fallacies. I bet you can't. Every time I have ever heard anyone try, it's always filled with unproven assertions and special pleading.
So back to what I'm saying. It is impossible to apply the scientific method to the question AND prove or disprove it.
Unfalsifiable
It takes a paradigm shift and not everyone has made that shift... yet.

You may or may not but it's not about arguing my falsifiable hypothesis, it's about letting go of the wrong question or scientific problem.
Hypothesis: Human god beliefs are fictional creations. Human gods are mythical creatures. It's not only easily tested, we can even go the next step in Koch's Postulate and put the hypothesis to the test. This was done albeit not purposefully when the Cargo Cults developed.
What gets in the way of this paradigm shift is the argument one cannot prove that is the case for
all god beliefs. It's a rather stupid argument, IMO, because we don't do any such thing with say for example evolution theory. Does anyone say one cannot conclude all mammal lifeforms on Earth are DNA based because one has not yet tested every lifeform? That's not how we word scientific conclusions.
Is it falsifiable because you can test every lifeform even if the task is immense? What about extinct animals? At some point we say we have tested enough mammal lifeforms that we develop a theory.
And evolution is a theory because there is always potential for new evidence.
But we don't say we can't 'prove' that fact therefore evolution theory is not falsifiable. We say one
can generate falsifiable hypotheses within evolution theory.
The whole idea we can't let go of fictional god beliefs because we can't prove no gods exist is a ludicrous argument. Fiction is fiction, it's not evidence. It's not something one has to constantly remind ourselves or others of that there is no proof
every god is a fictional creature.
We could test every god belief but it is an immense task. So like genomes, at some point we conclude there is a pattern.
What other 'no evidence for X' do you do that with?
Life on other planets? No, that is not something we have
no evidence for, we have evidence life exists in the Universe, it is all around us. So that 'X' is a where and how much, not a 'no evidence for'.
String theory? That's above my pay grade but it's my understanding that is a theory to explain evidence that doesn't fit into current particle physics.
Back to testing the 'gods are fictional' hypothesis? How do you test that? Now you have the problem of hard science vs what is so-called soft science. Contrary to what people not involved in sciences such as anthropology might believe, the scientific method applies and there are ways to test multi-variable human behavior problems.