For most browsers, yes, you can accomplish getting all needed code to the browser with just ES6 modules, without Webpack. Whether you'd want to do that, though, is another matter, and depends on your target browsers and how many modules your application consists of (balanced against your tolerance for lots of network requests).
Browser support for ES6 modules is close to ubiquitous right now but, for example, on Android, export
isn't supported in embedded-in-app browsers at the moment. So, if you want for your scripts to work in say, Facebook's or LinkedIn's or Twitter's in-app browser on Android, that'll be a problem.
A potentially bigger problem is the number of network requests you may need to expect if you don't bundle your code. If your application consists of, say, two dozen modules (not a crazy number of modules at all), that's two dozen network requests your browser has to make. And as you likely know, loading (say) 200K of JavaScript over two-dozen requests is a lot slower than loading that same 200K of JavaScript in one request.
Finally, even if you were going with loading two dozen modules client-side, presumably you'd want to be loading minified JavaScript (even if you're not transpiling, just minifying). Which means you're doing some server-side code manipulation already. Which means, bundling all that code as a final step will, still, almost always make sense.
Hope this helps! It's a good and reasonable question; just answering it made me think about stuff I hadn't really thought through before.