Again not a complete answer: If we consider the analog situation, where we replace the finite groups by simple finite groups, then there exists no such universal group $S$.
Indeed, assume such a hypothetical universal group $S$ exists. Then it must be countable by an analogous argument to the answer of Sean Eberhard and of course $S$ cannot be finite.
Analogously, as above, we consider
$G = \prod_{F \in \mathscr{F}} F$, where the product runs over a
system of representatives $\mathscr{F}$ of all finite simple groups
up to isomorphism.
We call $S \subseteq G$ a product subgroup, if
$S = \prod_{F \in \mathscr{F}} S_F$
where $S_F$ is a subgroup of $F$. A product subgroup $S$ of $G$ is normal if and only if $S_F$ is trivial or equal to $F$ for all $F \in \mathscr{F}$. In the next paragraph we show that every normal subgroup of $G$ is a product subgroup of $G$. This will prove that every quotient of
$G$ is either uncountable or finite, and hence, there exists no surjective homomorphism $G \to S$, contradiction.
Let $N$ be a normal subgroup of $G$. Choose a maximal normal
product subgroup $S$ of $G$ such that $S \cap N$ is trivial.
Consider the quotient map $\pi \colon G \to G/S$. Then $\pi$ restricts to an injection
$N \to G/S$ which is also surjective by the maximality of $S$
(in fact, $G/S = \prod_{F \in \mathscr{F}_S} F$ for some subset
$\mathscr{F}_S$ of $\mathscr{F}$. If $N \to G/S$ is not surjective, then there exists $F_0 \in \mathscr{F}_S$ such that
$T = \prod_{F \in \mathscr{F}_S} R_F$ intersects $\pi(N)$ trivially, where $R_F$ is trivial for all $F \in \mathscr{F}_S \setminus \{F_0\}$
and $R_{F_0} = F_0$. But in this case $\pi^{-1}(T)$ is a normal product subgroup of $G$ that intersects $N$ trivially but contains $S$ properly, contradiction).
Let
$\rho \colon G \to \prod_{F \in \mathscr{F} \setminus \mathscr{F}_S} F$
be the natural projection. Then the homomorphism
$$
\prod_{F \in \mathscr{F}_S} F \simeq N \xrightarrow{\rho|_N}
\prod_{F \in \mathscr{F} \setminus \mathscr{F}_S} F
$$
is trivial, since every homomorphism $F \to F'$ is trivial for
distinct $F, F' \in \mathscr{F}$. This shows that $N$ lies in the kernel of $\rho$. Since, $N$ and $\ker(\rho)$ are both sections of $\pi \colon G \to G/S$, we get
$N = \ker(\rho)$. Hence, $N$ is a normal product subgroup of $G$.
EDIT: The argument doesn't work, as the homomorphism
$\rho |_N \colon N \to \prod_{F \in \mathscr{F} \setminus \mathscr{F}_S} F$ is not necessarily trivial!