No, that's what "RAD" means. "Low Code" means systems like Excel where "formulas" aren't exactly seen as "code" and nearly everything can be wired up visually. Power Apps and Power BI are "Low Code". Access and Excel are "Low Code". VB was never "Low Code", it was "RAD".
(And yes, today's WinForms and XAML editors in Visual Studio are quite "RAD", and exactly as "RAD" as VB <= 6 was, if not more so. VB.NET was never less "RAD" than VB <= 6 from the standpoint of visual tools. It just shifted component/plugin ecosystems and left an impression that it was less "rapid" to develop with because of sharp new learning curve, but the "rapid" never meant "no learning curves", it meant WYSIWYG designers, which VB.NET still had in spades.)