Take infinitely many 2-variable polynomials $p_k(X,Y)\in \mathbb{Q}[X]$ ($k\in \mathbb{N}$) and let $S_n$ be the surface given by $p_1(X,Y)=Z_1^2,\dots, p_n(X,Y)=Z_n^2$ Assume that no $p_k$ equals the product of any ``previous" $p_j$ up to squares, so that $S_n\to S_{n-1}$ is indeed a quadratic cover.
Is it possible for all $S_n$ ($n\in \mathbb{N}$) to have a Zariski dense set of rational points?
(Note that the answer to the same question for 1-variable polynomials is ``no" by Faltings' theorem, since taking the fiber product of quadratic covers of curves will quickly blow up the genus.)