tl;dr: this is not actually "enforced".
What you're seeing is one more in a long string of attempts by the site to implement half-baked technical solutions to problems identified by the community, with little to no understanding of the problem and a very shaky idea of how the site is actually supposed to work.
Your question was edited to integrate one important detail of what you tried into the prose of the question: the versions of Angular involved in the upgrade (16->17). Everything else you mentioned there was already implicit in your description of the problem, so there was no reason to restate it. (It's also good policy to start off troubleshooting questions with "I'm trying to...", so that the reader has a clear starting point to understand the problem.)
The "Ask Question Wizard" (2022) vs. Stack Overflow policy
It sounds like you're asking about the Ask Question Wizard (currently just called "Ask Wizard" in the UI) introduced in 2022. (My understanding is that there were previous attempts at implementing this sort of thing, but none were rolled out site-wide.) My understanding is that this is only mandatory for your first question. As an experienced user, you should be able to disable this by turning off the option at the top of the form (shown disabled in this screenshot):
The Wizard is apparently intended to be a proper tool for guiding new users step by step through asking a question, but it very much underdelivers on that promise. Basically it just forces you to go through the form step by step (it's often better to write the title last, so this is a mistake), and splits the main body of the question into two sections. The form promises that it will "merge" this content - which means literal concatenation, not anything intelligent. So, technically, this is a "more step-by-step approach" - exactly one step has been added, and you are constrained to take the steps in order.
Fundamentally there are two major categories of question that make sense to ask on Stack Overflow: the ones where you're trying to figure out why something went wrong in your existing code; and the ones where you simply want to know how to do some simple task. The form is oriented towards those "why" questions - the assumption is that every question will be such a "debugging" question (I dislike this term, because in my mind if you have a proper MRE then you have already done the relevant debugging and are just left with a question about understanding behaviour).
Telling us what you tried is only helpful for those questions. If you have a how-to question, then it doesn't make any sense to fill in details about what you tried, because there's no particular expectation that you tried anything. (That often makes the question worse, in fact.) Instead, what we really want is a proper specification of the task - it should be immediately possible to understand how input is provided and structured, and how output is presented; and it should be clear how to test a proposed solution - i.e., for any given input, others should be able to check the output produced and clearly know whether it's correct.
The prompt has also been widely misinterpreted - resulting in questions with strangely phrased noise at the end. (Sometimes new users don't even write a complete sentence here, but just something like "an answer to the problem". Sometimes they copy and paste the first box into the second.)
But really the worst part is that, while some questions should include such information, it usually makes no sense to list it separately at the end. The simple concatenation of the two text fields produces nonsense in many cases, and substandard clarity in most other cases. And really, it's normally impossible to give any clear explanation of "the details of the problem" without incorporating "what you expected". For example, if the problem is that the code crashes with an uncaught exception, generally it's completely redundant to say "I expected the code to run without exception". There are cases where the OP can't clearly explain why the code's actual result is unsatisfactory; but this kind of prompting just doesn't help with those cases. Usually those questions just get closed as unclear and the OP never manages to edit them to fix the problem (which often seems to result from just not being able to communicate well enough).