OP, two issues:
1. Anything regarding "Before the big bang" is not physics. Physics is the study of the real world, based on physical laws revealed by experiments. If your questions involves quantities on which experimental insights is fundamentally impossible, it does not belong into physic's realm.
2. Whether or not the universe as a whole even has a entropy is not clear at all. Technically, entropy is not a property of a microscopical physical system; it is a property of a macroscopic description of an ensemble of physical systems which are microscopically different but macroscopically equivalent. The entropy is related to the lack of information about the concrete microscopic realization of the ensemble, if only macroscopic descriptors are given. More concretely:
For example, if you have a box of classical ideal gas particles, and know every particle's position and velocity, then this is a microscopic description of the gas and it does not have a entropy. If, however, you have a box and you only know "there is a classical ideal gas in there, with volume V, pressure p, and temperature T", then the latter is a ensemble description of the gas as it does have an entropy (because there are countless ways of arranging gas particle positions&velocities to realize the given V/p/T combination). So is the universe, as a whole, more like the former or the latter? In principle one could assume that the universe is in a pure state, which would mean that the question of entropy is not warranted.