Disabling Secure Boot temporarily in order to finish the installation
(mmx64.efi is supposed to be installed on disk at the end of the
install), or editing an installation image on USB to copy

grubx64.efi  in a new file called  mmx64.efi

Should be good workarounds for this.

Please don't run a system-rescue-cd or such custom "rescue" images to
manually remove files from /sys/firmware/efi/efivars -- it *can* be
done, but it's quite dangerous, likely to brick you system in a way that
*can't* be recovered. As per the above, the right fix is to finish the
installation and run the real mmx64.efi either by disabling Secure Boot
in your firmware (but NOT switching to Legacy boot) or making the
mmx64.efi available as a copy of grub.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1798171

Title:
  System fails to boot with \EFI\BOOT\mmx64.efi - Not Found

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