skeletonbow: Starcraft II, Diablo III, every Ubisoft game made since 2007 in the Tom Clancy franchise and every other big name Ubisoft title, many big name EA games titles since 2007 as well (most of the ones that are hugely popular AAA games), most AAA titles from other major studios that are DRM-laden as well. Just about anything that shows up and stays in the Steam top 20-30 or so list of most popular games I'd consider buying if they were DRM-free or had absolute minimal (by my own definition, not theirs or anyone elses) DRM that does not in any way affect my user experience as perceived by me.
The only way I end up playing DRM-laden games is if they're part of a free promotion or I win them in a contest/giveaway or they come free with a video card or something because I refuse to knowingly pay for games that have frustrating DRM experiences attached to them. I carefully research this for all my games in advance before considering buying them, by using the following page among others:
http://pcgamingwiki.com/wiki/The_Big_List_of_3rd_Party_DRM_on_Steam I've only made a mistake once really, when I bought the GTA Complete pack that includes all of the GTA games up to GTA4 and its expansions and later found out GTA4 has ridiculous crazy ass amounts of DRM on it, but that mistake only cost me $7 for the whole GTA franchise and only GTA4 and its expansion are affected so only $2-4 or so worth of the cost depending on what portion of that $7 GTA4 and its expansions is worth out of it.
I can't even begin to write a list of the name of every DRM-laden game I would have bought for sure if they weren't so full of hassle and bad customer experiences. The list would easily be well over 100 big name titles and possibly 200 or 300 by now. I even have many of these games on my Steam wishlist just to track them even though I wont ever buy them, they're just more like bookmarks of games I'd actually like to play rather than ones I'd pay money to own the DRM headaches. Future contest/giveaway winnings perhaps though. :)
I mostly fall in line with this. I haven't bought any Rockstar games on PC because of their shoddy approach to things, nor any Ubisoft games besides those here (my last Ubi purchase was Watch Dogs on the console and they
still try to shove Uplay in your face even there, so screw them anymore, though if Child of Light or the newer Rayman titles on the consoles don't have that in the way, I'll definitely pick them up), and I used to avoid EA titles, but I tripped into the ME trilogy's DRM due to a stupidly good sale (I didn't realize ME1 had SecuROM even in the Origin version, wtf EA?) so I shot the other foot and picked up Spore as well while I was at it (also on sale) after several years of avoiding it due to its same DRM.
If we're going to be mostly objective about it, of the poor PC supporters in the past few years, I think it's worthwhile to note that EA has in fact moderately improved for the most part. Origin's honestly not that awful, compared to the glitsy, crowded look of UPlay. For comparison:
[url=http://i.imgur.com/qlkq9Eo.jpg]Uplay. The Uplay image may be out of date now, but the few times I saw it, it just frustrated me. Someone I know was willing to endure it more than I was, and fortunately for him, it didn't give him any trouble, but ugh. That design's just gross and cluttered to me.
Edit: I also haven't bought the first two Bioshocks or Batman Arkham games, though I think they may have peeled away the ugliest parts of their DRM recently. Despite what I said of EA, I still haven't picked up a bunch of their games due to DRM concerns, such as Mirror's Edge and the Dead Space trilogy, as well as Dragon Age: Origins.