John followed the instructions and ran the SFC scan using the Command Prompt as an administrator. The scan detected issues with the file and replaced it with a healthy version.
After scouring through various forums and Microsoft support pages, John found a reliable source that suggested updating his Windows 10 installation to resolve the issue. However, his computer was already up-to-date, so that wasn't the solution.
Just when John was about to give up, he stumbled upon a Microsoft support article that mentioned the api-ms-win-core-memory-l1-1-0.dll file was part of the Windows API. The article suggested that a System File Checker (SFC) scan could repair or replace the corrupted file.
John tried to launch his favorite game, but it wouldn't budge. He tried restarting his computer, but the error persisted. He was stuck. After some research, he discovered that the api-ms-win-core-memory-l1-1-0.dll file was a crucial system file required by Windows to function properly.

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