The other forces are also just the result of "spacetime bending", just in a different way. There is no fundamental difference in the description of the other forces through gauge theories and gravity through relativity.1 The reason why it is often said that it is different is that our usual methods of quantizing a theory fail when applied to gravity. But to say "gravity is a result, not a force" is as right/wrong as saying "electromagnetism is a result, not a force". Polemically speaking, the notion of force or not force is the wrong idea to use when thinking about field theories and their quantization.
The currently known fundamental forces except for gravity can all be described in a framework that is analogous to that of relativity. It's all about modifying the ordinary derivative in a way that spits out something that transforms properly under the symmetry group of the theory, and is called gauge theory
General relativity has the diffeomorphism group of spacetime as this symmmetry, and uses the Levi-Civita connection to gain the covariant derivative. In this process, we gain a new dynamical object in the theory, namely the connection itself, or rather, the metric from which it is derived.
The strong force has the Lie group $\mathrm{SU}(3)$, the weak force has $\mathrm{SU}(2)$, and electromagnetism has $\mathrm{U}(1)$ as gauge groups, and they demand an Ehresmann connection to provide a gauge covariant derivative. To this connection, there is an associated connection form, usually called gauge field, which is a new dynamical object in the theory. The most commonly known form of this is the four-potential of EM.
The idea is always the same: There's some kind of transformation on our theory which should not change the physical laws. To make our ordinary derivative play nice with this theory, we introduce new objects added to it to kill the unwanted terms that are incurred when we would let the normal derivative as. These objects are the gauge fields. It's geometry just like in relativity, since this induces the notion of principal bundles.
Now, quantizing such theories, we find that there are particles associated to the gauge fields, and these are called force carriers, since the classical forces may be obtain from the tree-level Feynman graphs in which they are "exchanged" between two particles charged under the force. Since relativity also looks like such a theory (only having the rank 2 stress-energy tensor and not some rank 1 four-current as its "source"), it is natural to expect that quantizing the dynamical object of relativity will yield a graviton. Conversely, any field coupling to the stress-energy tensor is expected to yield a force indistinguishable from gravity.
1Well, there is in the sense that the metric as the dynamical object of relativity impacts the world a bit more...directly than gauge fields, but the point to make here is that the frameworks used to describe the forces are not really different.