While reading up on magnetic monopoles, I have been led to understand that, due to S-duality, the magnetic equivalent of the fine-structure constant, $\alpha_M$ must be related to the reciprocal of $\alpha$--thus, much larger than 1. Thus, magnetic matter would be qualitatively different from electrically-bound atomic matter, due to magnetism being strongly coupled rather than weakly coupled such that perturbative calculations don't converge.
But suppose that $\alpha$ were set to 1 (by reducing $c$ to keep atomic physics as unperturbed as possible, as described in this answer). Is 1 a large enough value to screw up QFT calculations? And either way, am I correct in thinking that this would result in magnetic and electric charges being comparable in strength, such that, however matter ends up behaving in this hypothetical universe, magnetic and electric atoms would be similar?