The situation described in Pascal's mugging is OOD (out-of-distribution) for human values. Human values have not been trained/tested on scenarios with tiny probabilites of vast utilities.
What answer does a system that goes OOD give us? It doesn't matter, we are not supposed to use a system in OOD context.
Naively extrapolating human values too far is not permitted.
Giving an arbitrary/random answer is not permitted.
But we need to make some sort of decision, and we nothing but our values to guide us.
But out values are not defined for the decision we are trying to make.
And we are not allowed to define our values arbitrarily.
I think the answer is really complex, and involves something like "taking all our values and meta-values in account, what is the least arbitrary way we can extend our value system into the space in which we are trying to make a decision"
So, my answer to Pascal's mugging is: human values are probably not yet ready to answer questions like that, at least not in a consistent manner.
Pascal's Mugging isn't OOD. It's very much in-distribution for human beings historically - there is always a scammer waiting on a street corner offering a product that gives you extremely high utility, at very low probability, of course (imagine a tonic that claims to cure smallpox).
Imagine that I, a Lesswrong forum user, claimed to be from outside the simulation and capable of offering you infinite utility (I'm from a universe where that's possible) in exchange for a rare Pepe. That's not a hypothetical offer in a thought experiment. I just did. You had to make a decision when you decided to ignore it. You had to incorporate your values into your decision. You have to do so any time you ignore a scammer, Pascal or otherwise. That's a revealed preference. And humanity as a whole is remarkably consistent in recognizing its human values to ignore Pascal's mugger. If Pascal's mugger is OOD for human values, then anything claiming to give infinite/extremely high utility is also OOD for human values, which depending on your cutoff definitely includes Abrahamic religions and may include the industrial revolution. But those aren't OOD. They're a part of life.