First Version (September 27, 1978, #2963D, aired out of order on September 26-May 29, 1996, #0013K)[]
Behind the "O", a 1.
And she punched "THOUSAND" from the board; as such, her prize is $1,000.
The Old Punch-A-Bunch Punchboard with the yellow Punch-A-Bunch sign
Here it is again from later years.
This is what any player playing Punch-A-Bunch in the daytime from the 1970s to 2000s and in prime time 1986 wants to find. This is from a 1986 primetime special, as you can also see a close-up of Bob's tux.
Longtime model Janice Pennington playing the game herself. This all came about because she stated: "I've always wanted to play the game." This happened while Rod Roddy was reading off the prizes.
Bryan is playing Punch-a-Bunch.
Bryan finds $5,000 and decides to give it back.
After that, he finds the top cash prize seen here. What a real risk-taker.
Here's another look at a similar snapshot.
And Bryan sure was proud of that when he shocked the world from January 26, 1996 (#9825D).
Second Version (September 10, 1996, #0042K-May 16, 2016, #7541K)[]
One of the current Punchboard's earliest appearances. Notice the purple letters.
The Punchboard takes on its more familiar color scheme.
From January 4, 1999 (#0961K), a big win!
This is from Bob's final week, in particular, June 11, 2007 (#4031K). This is also from the DVD set (Disc 4, specifically), as there is no CBS bug.
This is what any player playing Punch-a-Bunch in the 2002 primetime specials and $1,000,000 Spectaculars wants to find. This is from the second Million Dollar Spectacular on February 12, 2003 (#008SP, aired out-of-order as the first MDS on February 5).
Third Version (May 23, 2016, #034SP-Present)[]
A graphic is now used when someone ends up winning the second-highest cash prize in "Punch-a-Bunch" (in this case, $10,000).
Custom Photos[]
a custom drawing of the original Punch-a-Bunch board