Yes, my friend
In the parable of the talents, no one is left without a talent.
The servant who was given one talent didn’t do anything with it. When the master returned and called the servant to give an account, the servant had done nothing with it. The talent is taken from the wicked servant and given to a good servant. That’s not the end of the parable. What does the master command be done with the wicked servant himself?
”Throw out the unprofitable servant servant into the outer darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.”
(Matthew 25:30, WEB)
The wicked and useless servant is cast out of God’s household, doesn’t inherit the kingdom of God, has his place in the darkness, where he will weep and lash out against the one God and the Messiah.
No man is deprived of the gifts of God, or the grace of God necessary to multiply those gifts. One of those gifts is the basic notion of good and evil (and sometimes, not so "basic". Pagan people could have very advanced notions of good and evil. Plato could have had a notion far advanced from a peasant Israelite of the same time period... or from some modern believers)