It is that type of record that helped build a legacy that this year's team wants to defend against England at Auckland's Eden Park on Saturday.
The Black Ferns were the last team to beat the Red Roses before England went on a record 30-game winning streak, which stretches back to mid-2019.
The English handed the Black Ferns heavy back-to-back defeats last year and the hosts will need to show they have improved if they are to defeat England for a fifth time in a World Cup final.
Coach Wayne Smith will step away from his short tenure with the Black Ferns after this tournament but hoped he has imparted some of the elements of his favourite side - the 1967 to 69 All Blacks - in the attacking way they played.
"Brian Lochore captained it, Ian Kirkpatrick was my favourite player of all time and I used to watch them and their forwards could catch and pass like backs. So I've always had that in my mind - they talk about 15-man rugby, that's 15-man rugby - that's what I love about the game.
"Once I got put into this role my aim was to try and be true to that with the women."
Having encouraged the Black Ferns to play more freely - Smith had a warning for his successor.
"Wouldn't like to be a coach that tried to turn them back - they'll want to keep going forward, I think, and develop this game further."
Tui has been dreaming since childhood of being a part of the Black Ferns and said she had no regrets switching to 15s for a home World Cup.
"Back in the day it was the underground champions [the Black Ferns] were just legends, hearsay, myths - but they've won more world cups than the boys," she said.
The winger had a lot of respect for the England side, even though she had never played them before in 15s.
"We're about to play the best in the world - obviously want to take their heads off, but I'm proud of them and what they've done for women's rugby.
"They're leading the world in all facets of it [and] we've got a little bit of catching up to do. So to play the best team in the world, in New Zealand, sold out at Eden Park in front of Aotearoa with all the poi and people singing the national anthem back - I can't wait for that."
Throughout the tournament the Black Ferns have spoken about how much the increasing support for women's rugby meant to them.
All Blacks halfback TJ Perenara has joined the chorus of backers.
"The growth in that team has been inspiring - not only for me as an individual, but for our team. I know that they had some tough times last year, but they've come together, grown so much and the footy that they're playing out on the field is something that we can all be proud of as New Zealanders and as fans of rugby."
"I look at her as more than whatever this result is - whatever she has achieved in the game that is all awesome - but the legacy that she will leave is going to be amazing.
"There'll be kids talking about her for a long time, there'll be professional rugby players in the future who will say, 'I looked up to Kenj when I was a young girl and she was the reason I play the game.'"
Cocksedge plays her last game for the Black Ferns tomorrow after a 15-year career that includes two previous World Cup finals and will leave the field as the most capped Black Fern and leading point-scorer.
The 34-year-old said she was proud to have been a part of both the amateur and professional era of the team - and the future of rugby in New Zealand.
"It is only going to grow and get better the product that we're giving out at the moment, and we've got to build the momentum from this World Cup.
"For me, after I retire I go back into my job at New Zealand Rugby and I work in a participation space - so I get to go back and work with every young girl and every young boy that wants to play the game because of this World Cup."