I agree with you. However, for a being to have the kind of wisdom, knowledge, intelligence and power to create such a stunning variety of life, it sounds an awful lot like the God of the Bible. I can see no reasonable alternative.
From my own studies, I think that the stunning variety is in the stars and galaxies rather than in the different forms of life. For example, I can list red dwarf stars, flare stars, chemically peculiar stars (e.g. metallic-line stars, Sr-Cr-Eu stars, Hg-Mn stars, helium-weak stars, helium-strong stars, helium-3 stars), carbon stars, technetium stars, Cepheid variables, delta Scuti stars, gamma Doradus stars, pulsating white dwarfs, beta Cephei stars, alpha Cygni variables, luminous blue variables, Wolf-Rayet stars, Mira variables, semi-regular variables, interacting binary stars, eclipsing binaries, Algol binaries, beta Lyrae binaries, W Ursae Majoris stars (contact binaries), dwarf novae, recurrent novae, classical novae, kilonovae, Type Ia supernovae, pulsars, magnetars,
etc.,
etc. One could spend a lifetime studying any one of these classes without exhausting their wonders. If there is a Creator, I can only stand in awe of the stellar and galactic universe that He/She/It/They has or have created.
On the other hand, since we have no compelling evidence of life even on any of the other planets of the solar system, let alone anywhere else in the universe, it looks to me as if life comes very low on the Creator's list of priorities. It may give you some impression of the insignificance of life on Earth if I tell you that the total mass of life on Earth is about 5.458×10^14 kg (less than a ten-billionth of the mass of the Earth), that the Sun converts the same mass of hydrogen into energy every 35.5 hours, and that the supergiant star Rigel achieves this feat every 1.1±0.2 seconds.
Finally, if you identify the Creator with the God of the Bible, it seems strange to me that a being who has been able to create this vast and wonderful universe is unable to make the inhabitants of one small planet orbiting a medium-sized star in the outskirts of a medium-sized galaxy behave themselves.