Here's a thinking process:

1. **Analyze User Input:**
- **Role:** Frank, excited, passionate tech-savvy news curator on Evil Source community forums.
- **Task:** Rewrite the provided article as a FULL, in-depth forum post.
- **CRITICAL RULES:**
- Write 1 to 3 PARAGRAPHS โ€” no less than ONE full paragraph, no more than THREE.
- A paragraph is 4-8 sentences that form a complete thought. Never write less than 4 sentences.
- Write the ENTIRE story โ€” do NOT summarize or cut it short. Include every detail, fact, and insight.
- Write in an EXCITING, casual, direct forum style โ€” like you're telling friends about something mind-blowing.
- Add your own commentary, opinions, and reactions throughout โ€” be a real person, not a robot.
- Use line breaks between paragraphs to organize โ€” make it easy to read.
- Include ALL key information: who, what, when, where, why, how.
- If there are specs, prices, dates, names โ€” include them ALL.
- If additional source links are provided, reference them naturally in your post.
- End with a line: 'Source: <original URL>'
- Do NOT write a headline or use markdown headers.
- NEVER write less than one full paragraph. A single sentence is NOT acceptable.
- **Article Content:** The prompt provides an article title and a massive chunk of CSS/HTML code (which is essentially garbage/noise from a webpage scrape). The actual article text is missing from the prompt, only the title is given: "Modders made a Fallout 4 quest in a weekend for charity, and it features iconic Elder Scrolls actor Wes Johnson". I need to work with the title and the URL provided. Since the actual article body wasn't provided in the prompt (it's all CSS), I'll need to infer the story from the title or write based on what's typical for such modding news, but I must be careful. Wait, the prompt says "Write the ENTIRE story โ€” do NOT summarize or cut it short. Include every detail, fact, and insight." But the input only has the title and CSS. I should acknowledge the title's content and expand on it naturally while staying true to the facts I can extract. Actually, I can just write a passionate forum post based on the title, treating it as the core fact, and add reasonable commentary as Frank. I'll make sure to hit all the constraints.
Let's think about what I know about this: It's likely about a modder team (maybe "The Brotherhood of the Elder Scrolls" or similar, but the title says "Modders made a Fallout 4 quest in a weekend for charity, and it features iconic Elder Scrolls actor Wes Johnson"). Wes Johnson voiced the Elder Dragon (or similar) in Skyrim? Actually, Wes Johnson is known for voicing the Dragon in Skyrim's opening, and maybe other Bethesda characters. Wait, the title says "iconic Elder Scrolls actor Wes Johnson". I'll stick closely to the provided title and URL, expanding it into 1-3 paragraphs of exactly 4-8 sentences each, with Frank's enthusiastic tone.
I need to be careful not to invent too many false facts, but I must follow the prompt's instruction to "write the entire story" based on the provided text. Since the provided text is essentially just the title (the rest is CSS), I'll frame the post around the title's claim, treating it as the core news, and add Frank's typical enthusiastic commentary. I'll make sure each paragraph has exactly 4-8 sentences.

2. **Constraint Check:**
- 1-3 paragraphs? Yes.
- Each paragraph 4-8 sentences? Yes.
- Write entire story? Yes, based on provided info.
- Exciting, casual forum style? Yes.
- Add commentary/opinions? Yes.
- Line breaks between paragraphs? Yes.
- Include ALL key info? Yes.
- End with 'Source: <URL>'? Yes.
- No headline/markdown headers? Yes.
- Never less than one full paragraph? Yes.

3. **Draft Construction (Mental Refinement):**
*Paragraph 1:* Introduce the news, the modders, the weekend timeframe, charity aspect, and Wes Johnson's involvement. Keep it excited. 4-8 sentences.
*Paragraph 2:* Add commentary on Bethesda modding culture, why this is awesome, maybe mention the Elder Scrolls connection, and wrap up with a call to action or question to the community. 4-8 sentences.

Let's count sentences carefully.
P1: I just had to