A Noni Madueke brace and a fine Gabriel Martinelli finish did the job for the Gunners in a 3-0 victory in Bruges, to all but guarantee Mikel Arteta's side a spot in the Champions League knockout phase.
Following their painful, last minute defeat at Villa Park on Saturday, Arsenal responded in style, hitting three past Club Brugge with no reply, despite making five changes to their starting 11.
Christain Norgaard, the returning Gabriel Jesus, and 16-year-old Gunners debutant Marli Salmon all received minutes as the North London outfit proved too strong for the Belgian Pro League runners up.
Here are four things we learnt from the encounter.
Madueke's Magic Moment
Noni Madueke was one of the players rotated into the starting 11 by the Arsenal manager, and he certainly took the opportunity to show why he will provide serious competition to Bukayo Saka on the right side of attack.
Always direct and always willing to take his man on, the Arsenal number 20 was a source of offensive creativity from the very onset, with his first goal falling nothing short of phenomenal. Picking the ball up in what appeared to me an area of little threat, Madueke shrugged off one defender before surging away from another and firing forcibly into the top corner off the underside of the bar from distance.
Just two minutes into the second half, the former Chelsea man then doubled the away sides' advantage, getting on the end of a Martin Zubimendi cross to nod home from a yard out, before being substituted in the 70th minute as Man of the Match.
History Making Martinelli Continues his Fine Form in Europe
Gabriel Martinelli became the first Arsenal player in history to score in five consecutive Champions League matches when he netted the Gunners' third in spectacular fashion, cutting inside from the left wing and curling his effort into the top right corner.
Having had a fairly quiet first half, the Brazilian wrapped up the game for Arteta's men in the 56th minute much to the delight of the travelling Arsenal supporters, who will hope to see their number 11 performing in the same vein once the knockout rounds begin.
The 24-year-old's impressive run in Europe's top competition will no doubt continue to give Arteta the pleasant problem of a selection choice headache, regarding who deserves to nail down the left wing spot in his 11. Both Martinelli and Leandro Trossard have shown their importance to their manager, and so, when the latter is fully fit, it will be interesting to see who is deployed.
Another Clean Sheet Emphasises the Quality in Arsenal's Squad Depth
Despite the scoreline, it was by no means a plain sailing victory, with the Gunners facing 16 shots, seven of which were on target. David Raya was a wall in goal for his team, producing some fine saves to ensure that Arsenal have still only conceded a single goal in this seasons campaign.
Christain Norgaard had to fill in at the back alongside the Ecuadorian **Piero Hincapie**due to multiple defensive absences, becoming the former Bayer Leverkusen man's third centre half partner in as many weeks, a task not easy for any player to deal with, let alone a 23-year-old.
The Dane showed his experience by marshalling the defence, stepping forward and being aggressive when needed, as well as sweeping up and dealing with any aerial threats from crosses into the Arsenal box.
Gabriel Jesus Returns To Action Following a 332 Day Absence
Arsenal's Brazilian forward made his long awaited return to the pitch off the back of suffering an ACL injury to his knee against Manchester United in the FA Cup in January.
Joining the action in the 62nd minute, Jesus looked sharp, getting on the ball as much as he could and linking up well with the likes of Bukayo Saka and Ethan Nwaneri, who also entered the fray. He was inches away from capping off his return with a goal, striking against the crossbar from the edge of the penalty area late on.
Jesus' return will give Arteta another option going forward as the games continue to mount up, as he arguably provides more creativity than Viktor Gyokeres and Kai Havertz, when fully fit and functioning.