I was the one bringing it up on SOCVR and casting the first close vote. My reasoning was as follows:
I'll bring in a few parts of the question, and explain my reasoning.
How to have Access show a child form which the user must interact with?
First, I'm not sure if children forms, or child form, are the correct terms for what I want, so maybe that's why I didn't find anything.
The OP is clearly not sure how to call things by their name. We don't know if he's talking about subforms (which I assumed), or other forms.
I have a main form in Access. It has buttons to open other forms. I would like to prevent the user from toggling between forms.
That's pretty unclear. OP isn't sharing any code, and the most likely way to achieve this without code is the navigation control. And in that case, the forms could be seen as child forms (subform would be the more appropriate word).
But wait, is it? Or are all the buttons coded with macro's or VBA (code OP is not sharing), and are the forms not children at all, but just completely unrelated forms.
Or maybe it's something else altogether.
In my opinion, the OP hasn't limited the question to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer., the definition of too broad. I don't know enough about his setup to know he wants a modal form, or that he wants you to prevent changing tabs on a navigation control and he wants you to prevent changing form until data entry is complete, or that he wants something else altogether.
Your answer assumes that those child forms are completely unrelated to the main form. And your answer does not only prevent him from toggling between forms, but also makes him unable to use any other part of the database. I'm not sure that the assumption is correct, neither am I sure that the result is correct.
Of course, wrongfully tagging the question access didn't help too, but the reason I closed the question is that I don't know enough about the setup to adequately identify an answer, and that I see any answer on the question as speculation about what the OPs setup might be, and what he might want as an answer.
And honestly, you start your answer with It sounds like you want, which indicates you're not fully sure either