New Zealand found the missing gears to produce an unstoppable first half in Hamilton, hammering England 36-13 to win the series 3-0.
We've been waiting for the All Blacks to truly play like the All Blacks all month.
They levelled the 17-game winning streak by the 1996/1997 Springboks and matched by themselves two years ago in brutal fashion. It was awesome to behold. They had only needed 20 minutes in Dunedin - this one was all over after 40.
You can argue this was a game too far for England, but even at peak fitness and with all their starters, hell if any side in the world faced New Zealand in this mood, the outcome would be the same.
Malakai Fekitoa did well on his first start, but it was the more familiar names - Ben Smith, Aaron Smith, Julian Savea, Jerome Kaino, Tony Woodcock and the rest - that were a cut above. Aaron Cruden too, under pressure from Beauden Barrett, responded. Savea, unplayable at times, bagged a hat-trick.
That said, England were broken in the first half. Their set-piece crumbled. Missed tackles were incessant - 13 in all. It's not what we've come to expect from Stuart Lancaster's team over the last two years.
Despite their fighting spirit after the break, the result was already decided. This could have been a hiding, yet England bizarrely kept New Zealand out until well after the hooter sounded.
Performing the Kapa o Pongo in consecutive weeks was as clear sign of respect towards an English outfit that have made New Zealand sweat.
Good pressure at the base of the scrum from Ben Youngs forced the All Blacks into a scramble, Robshaw winning his side an early penalty for Burns to convert. He hooked it to the left.
Fast starts have helped England be competitive in this series but now it was New Zealand's turn to score first, the ever present Savea given too much room following Chris Ashton's missed tackle on Aaron Smith with Mike Brown unable to stop the giant wing at full flight.
Burns was on the money with his second penalty attempt, but New Zealand were in a ruthless mood.
Cruden responded to his critics with a scything run, England's narrow defence ripped open again so that even though the pass bobbled across the turf Savea still had enough time to gather and go over for his second. This week, unlike the previous two, even the bad passes were coming off.
Savea could have had a hat-trick inside 14 minutes, if only Ben Smith's final pass hadn't gone forward. Three times Ashton rushed infield to defend and three times Savea was left with nothing but grass in front of him.
Thriving off England's exhausted set-piece and their backward steps, New Zealand's power was all-consuming as Cruden added another three to the board. Burns responded to add some colour at 15-6.
When your luck is against you the running is never easy, so Billy Vunipola's extremely harsh yellow card for a high tackle of Cruden stuck England further under the cosh. There was no time to wallow, the All Blacks short lineout giving Dane Coles a touchline sprint with only Ashton's intervention stopping another try.
England were being burned on the outside time and again as this time Cory Jane had too much speed for the drift, cutting back against it and giving Aaron Smith enough room to finish.
Having relied so much on their organisation in the close quarters in the first two tests, England now had none to speak of even in defence or at the set-piece.
Ben Smith was also matching his mood from Dunedin, the mesmerising full-back at it again with steps, tackles, kicks and assists punishing England over and over in an outstanding first half as Aaron Smith scored again. They could have lead by more than 29-6 at half-time.
England's character has never been questioned though, despite the deficiencies. Yarde barged his way over for a second try in two games after a good break from Ben Youngs - who stood out - and could very nearly have had a second when he was held up over the line.
Removing both Kieran Read and Cruden from the line of fire, initially lose a little bit of momentum but they left England sucking in the big ones with a sustained period of pressure the oddly ended with no points scored.
Yarde was turning into a nuisance for the All Blacks with his powerful carries, the intensity from New Zealand naturally slipping away after such a perfect opening 40 minutes.
Giving Yarde space wasn't wide but Savea had the presence to bundle him after touch after the England winger had skipped around Ben Smith - a rare sight at that.
From their spoiling tactics at New Zealand lineouts to their stubbornness, England were frustrating their hosts once again. Not that it truly mattered.
Wyatt Crockett was the fall guy for the All Blacks persistent discrepancies as the hosts finished the contest with 14 men. Old All Black errors at the lineout from the previous Tests also crept back in, the perfection of the first half feeling very long ago.
God help any side that faces New Zealand when they consistently get it right for 80 minutes. It's yet to happen in 2014.
The scorers:
For New Zealand:
Tries: Savea 3, A.Smith 2
Cons: Cruden 3, Barrett
Pen: Cruden
Yellow Card: Crockett
For England:
Try: Yarde
Con: Burns
Pens: Burns 2
Yellow Card: Vunipola
New Zealand: 15 Ben Smith, 14 Cory Jane, 13 Malakai Fekitoa, 12 Ma'a Nonu, 11 Julian Savea, 10 Aaron Cruden, 9 Aaron Smith, 8 Kieran Read, 7 Richie McCaw (c), 6 Jerome Kaino, 5 Sam Whitelock, 4 Brodie Retallick, 3 Owen Franks, 2 Dane Coles, 1 Tony Woodcock.
Replacements: 16 Keven Mealamu, 17 Wyatt Crockett, 18 Charlie Faumuina, 19 Patrick Tuipulotu, 20 Liam Messam, 21 TJ Perenara, 22 Beauden Barrett, 23 Ryan Crotty.
England: 15 Mike Brown, 14 Chris Ashton, 13 Manu Tuilagi, 12 Kyle Eastmond, 11 Marland Yarde, 10 Freddie Burns, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 Billy Vunipola, 7 Chris Robshaw (capt), 6 Tom Wood, 5 Courtney Lawes, 4 Joe Launchbury, 3 David Wilson, 2 Dylan Hartley, 1 Joe Marler.
Replacements: 16 Rob Webber, 17 Matt Mullan, 18 Kieran Brookes, 19 Dave Attwood, 20 Ben Morgan, 21 Lee Dickson, 22 Danny Cipriani, 23 Luther Burrell.
Referee: Jérôme Garcès (France)
Assistant Referees: Nigel Owens (Wales), James Leckie (Australia)
TMO: George Ayoub (Australia)
Pisi kicked five first-half penalties to give Samoa a 15-5 lead at halftime and added his sixth penalty, Samoa's only points of the second half, to finish with six goals for seven attempts.
The result is the Brave Blossom's first-ever victory over Italy as the Azzurri slumped to their ninth consecutive defeat.
After being shut out in a tight game in Melbourne last week, the impressive hosts outscored les Bleus five tries to one in a performance that bodes well for their chances in the Rugby Championship.
The visitors made a flying start, scoring an early brace through Joe Gray and Ben Foden, before Brad Barritt and Alex Goode cancelled out Matt Todd's five-pointer for the hosts with tries of their own.
This won't be a phrase Welsh supporters will like to hear but it was men against boys in this first of two Tests, with the Bok power glaringly dominant as their big runners laid the platform for victory.
The full-back converted all four of Japan's tries and also sent over three penalties to help the Brave Blossoms claim a bonus-point victory.
The triumph at Estadio José Fierro was not as convincing as last week as Argentina fought until the end, with Madigan's try being the difference.
A harsh red card for Canada flank Jebb Sinclair soured what was an absorbing Test, but it will be one that the hosts will feel they could have won.
Bizarrely considering there were 73 points last Saturday, we didn't get any at all here until the 53rd minute. Hardly a great advert for the rugby public in this part of Australia.
England had at one point led 10-0, but that felt a long old time ago when they were being battered relentlessly by the All Blacks deep into the second half. The score might have been tight at the final whistle, but England had been blown away by the time Mike Brown and Chris Ashton crossed.
Picking up where they left off against Italy last week, Fiji ran in six tries in Luatoka.
The result follows the Azzurri's loss to Fiji last weekend to round off a poor year in Test rugby so far.
The Scots were dominant, but made rather hard work of their win in the sweltering Houston heat against an Eagles side that is on the up in world rugby.
The result gives Joe Schmidt's outfit momentum going into next week's Test against the same opposition in Tucum�n as they backed up their Six Nations triumph with a solid performance.
The Springboks recovered from a slow start to outscore their opponents six tries to one in an entertaining game in front 30 000-odd fans at Newlands.
France have not beaten the Wallabies in Australia since 1990 and, based on this performance, they are unlikely to change that record in this three-Test series.
Nadolo was one of three try scorers for the Islanders, crossing first before adding two penalties and a conversion after starting at inside centre.
The clock had ticked a minute past full-time with Manu Samoa clinging to an 18-15 lead when Tongan lock Josh Afu was pulled down in a line-out.
Smith's finish in the corner settled a contest in which for 75 minutes the world champions were utterly rattled by Stuart Lancaster's tight-knit squad, who humbled their critics.
Full-back Ayumu Goromaru kicked a total of 18 points, while winger Yoshikazu Fujita seared over for a brace of tries as the Brave Blossoms overturned a 7-0 deficit to blitz their hard-hitting rivals.
It Seven tries, including a double for Mike Brown, saw England finish this year's championship with four wins from five matches and a points difference of plus 73, but eight short of Ireland with Joe Schmidt's side to play in Paris later on Saturday.
It It wasn't pretty and France came mighty close to snatching victory at the end but for a forward pass, but Ireland won't care as they claimed their first title since 2009, a second for most of this squad.