Between May 2007 and February 2008, celebrities answered questions about various people and things to earn money for charity, to help teachers in the South of Thailand.
A name change in April saw the Tod Sa Gun being dropped from the show's title because the questions generally no longer involve displaying a picture of someone's face.
A later format change, perhaps due to the controversy (see below), saw teams of three different ages, and then single players, playing for charity in a similar format to the Southern Teachers version, before the kids' edition was discontinued altogether in June 2008, which, combined with the renaming of Yok Siam (above), meant an end to the Tod Sa Gun name after just over 5 years.
Internet webboard posters, such as in Pantip.com, have alleged that the game is set up to make more appealing players win (like in the 1950s American quiz show scandals.)
It was noted that Phanya Nirunkul, the show's host and Workpoint's owner, gave a lot of support to the child.
There was a pocketbook written about the boy's success in the game published by Phanya's company, even before he had reached his 200 wins.
All in all, it look like a big setup to promote an unknown boy to fame and reap a long-term rating from his popularity.
A young girl has also had 200 consecutive wins in the kids edition, and the allegation has started flying around internet webboards once again.
Fan Pan Tae, another Workpoint's quiz show by Phanya, is also criticized about inaccuracy.