England ran in 12 tries in an 84-7 routing of Scotland in the second round of the Women's Six Nations at Murrayfield.
Due to a raft of injuries, England were forced into five changes from their opening win against Ireland, the biggest seeing Ellie Kidlunne move from full-back onto the wing for Emma Sing.
Alex Matthews was ruled out of the clash with Scotland due to a shoulder injury, while Hannah Botterman, Morwenna Talling, Natasha Hunt, May Campbell and Tatyana Heard have been ruled out of the entire tournament.
Despite all the changes, England did not look fazed as they ran in five tries in the first half that helped secure the bonus point, Ellie Kildunne going in twice alongside, Meg Jones, Kelsey Clifford, and Emma Sing.
Scotland did hit back through Rhona Lloyd, who became the first woman ever to score for her country in a stand alone women's fixture at Murrayfield, but they went in 35-7 down with a lot of work to do in the second 40.
The second half was all England as they ran in seven more tries to complete the demolition job. A double for Sarah Bern plus efforts from Amy Cokayne, Marlie Packer, Sadia Kabeya, Mia Venner, and Haineala Lutui helped rack up a raft of points.
Zoe Harrison also did her part as she was perfect with the boot and sent over 12 conversions for the 84-7 win that moves the Red Roses to the top of the Women's Six Nations table.
In front of a 30,498 strong crowd at Murrayfield, it was Scotland who had all the early possession in the opening five minutes but once England weathered that storm, they made their chances count.
That saw them on the scoreboard on the eighth minute when Maddie Feaunati broke through and found Kildunne in her new position on the wing to show off her pace. Harrison converted for a 7-0 lead.
It took just five minutes for the visitors to go over again, this time through Sadia Kabeya combining with captain Jones who sliced through, Scotland clearly struggling with their defensive shape.
England remained patient and got their reward on the 23rd minute when they shifted it through hands and Jones found the perfect looping pass to send Kildunne in for her second and 50th international try.
The forwards then got in on the action when Clifford barrelled over to sure up the bonus point from close range. Harrison continued her perfection with the boot to move the Red Roses 28-0 ahead.
Eventually, Scotland did give some delight to their home crowd when a brilliant kick over the top was collected to send Lloyd in for her history-making moment, Helen Nelson converting to bring the score to 28-7.
Despite the moment of joy, normal service quickly resumed when England rolled forward, Maud Muir knocking over the defenders in her wake, and then sent the ball to the right edge for Sing to score. Harrison obliged with the boot once again to give her side a 35-7 lead at the break.
After a nervy opening few minutes of the second half, England found their rhythm and put in a 40 minutes to put the rest of the Women's Six Nations on notice.
The direct route from the lineout maul brought the first points of the second half as Cokayne went over in a manner she is used to, Harrison converting for a 42-7 lead.
After making her way onto the field, Bern then made sure to get in on the action by using her strength on the 54th and 60th minute to power over. Her converted efforts helped the Red Roses past the half-century mark and into a more than commanding lead.
After a raft of changes from head coach John Mitchell, England's XV were lining up to score and veteran Packer was the next to go over with their ninth try, Sadia Kabeya following 10 minutes later as she used her strength against a Scotland side that was faltering under the constant pressure both from England's attacking abilities but also unforced errors to put themselves under pressure.
With just five minutes remaining, the Red Roses were not done, and it was time for the young guns to get in on the action. Mia Venner went in on the 77th minute at the corner on just her third Test cap before Lutui barreled over on her second Test cap with just seconds remaining on the clock.
Harrison, who ran the show for her side, added her 11th and 12th conversion to seal the 84-7 routing.
France put in a big second half to secure a 38-7 win over Wales at Cardiff Park.
The victory means France in second in the Women's Six Nations table, behind England only on points difference.
The match was in the balance at half-time thanks to a penalty try for Wales. France's Yllana Brosseau was shown a yellow card and things then got worse for Les Blues when scrum-half Pauline Bourdon Sansus gave away the penalty try and was also sent to the sin bin.
However, France managed to emerge from their spell with just 13 players on the pitch without conceding more points and were level by the break.
From there, they took things up a notch and despite Wales' grit, they could not keep up.
Manae Feleu crossed the whitewash as well as Bourdon Sansus before winger Lea Murie went over.
Then, Anais Grando went over twice late on to seal what was a comprehensive win.
Beibhinn Parsons scored a hat-trick of tries as Ireland secured a dominant 57-20 victory against Italy in Galway to move to third in the Women's Six Nations standings.
Hungry to bounce back following their 21-point defeat to England last week, Ireland got off to a flying start in the match, with Emily Lane opening the scoring after just five minutes.
The hosts would go on to score a whopping seven tries in the first half, which was enough to secure victory, with the Irish appearing to take their feet off the gas pedal in the second half, adding only two more tries to their haul.
"It meant so much to us after last week to come out and put in a dominant performance," Ireland captain Erin King told BBC Sport.
"From one to 23, everyone who came on that pitch worked so hard for each other. I'm really proud of the squad and the work from the girls."
England captain Meg Jones speaking to the BBC...
"I think we were relentless today.
"We want to keep building every game we have and this game gives us great feedback. We want to just keep getting better and better every game we have.
"I am really proud of how the girls adapted today."
England World Cup winner Maggie Alphonsi speaking to the BBC...
"All the forwards really stepped up today.
"Again, I'll come back to last weekend against Ireland, you didn't really see the forwards get into the game. You didn't see them win the collisions. You didn't see them go forward, if anything.
"Today, they absolutely owned it... this England team have got a really good power game.
"It was an impressive display from England.
"After the way they played against Ireland, you could say England were very rusty. They left opportunities behind, but today they capitalised on every chance when they got into the 22.
"I think I wrote down 20 visits and they scored 12 tries. It just shows you just how good this side is. Every player stood up.
"It's disappointing for the Scottish fans. Thirty thousand [fans] are here to watch Scotland play and they just didn't put in a performance."