Honestly, I do not see the reason to have the "es6-" prefix. The so-called "ES6 features" were only introduced with the 6th version of the ECMAScript specification in 2015. However, many have grown and evolved since then. The moniker "ES6" does not seem to fit.
We can take es6-class as an example. Classes were introduced in ES6 but have also been extended later. ES13 (ECMAScript 2022) introduced private fields and static blocks. Would it make sense to still talk about the ES6 classes if anybody asks about static blocks? It is not an ES6 feature at that point. What about es6-generator - if somebody asks about async generators, how is that tag appropriate, given that it is an ES9/ECMAScript 2018 feature.
If you find my argument shaky, then answer this: if we are going to have ES6-* prefixes for features introduced in ES6 - why do we not have any equivalent ones? Do we have a tag es5-array.prototype.map or just array.prototype.map? How about es5-strict-mode vs strict-mode? Why is it that ES6 is segregated when, for all intents and purposes, adding classes is the exact same enhancement to the language as adding strict mode - it is a new permanent feature for all the years to come.
It makes a lot more sense to drop the ES6. At this point in time, it has been 8 years since ES6 has been adopted as a standard. And has been superseded by 8 other versions of the spec, all of them building on top of everything before. The whole ecmascript-6 tag is very often misapplied on questions that either have nothing to do with ES6 itself or at best are just asking for "short syntax" (because the question asker expected using an arrow function or a for..of
loop or other more recent options to be the answer) even if the actual solution comes from ES7, ES8, ES9, etc.