Reaction to most of the dubs that aired on the block were mixed, with a couple of dubs, such as that of Tokyo Mew Mew, F-Zero: GP Legend, and Ojamajo Doremi being widely panned, others like Sonic X being viewed as So Okay, It's Average, and that of Kirby: Right Back at Ya!, Ultimate Muscle, Winx Club, and Shaman King receiving far better reception. For much of the block's existence, its programming consisted primarily of anime that went through 4Kids' same modification techniques that they used with Pokémon and Yu-Gi-Oh!, the latter of which would jump to 4KidsTV in September 2006 following Kids' WB!'s move to The CW. The block, which launched in September as "FoxBox" before re-branding to 4KidsTV in January 2005, was handled entirely by 4Kids with all advertising revenue going to them, with Fox's only involvement pertaining to reviewing programming to ensure they met their standards and practices guidelines. With the success of both anime dubs pushing the company to new heights, 4Kids capitalized by reaching an agreement with the Fox network in 2002 to take over programming duties for their Saturday morning time slot, replacing Fox's in-house block Fox Kids (which had sold its production houses as well as the Fox Family cable channel to Disney the year prior) after several years of being in ratings free-fall.