orcishgamer: The Amazon store has always been pathetic at enumerating anything beyond a Steam requirement. I'd be shocked if they'd figured this one out yet. You probably have to rely on some third party compiled list.
That's a reason why I prefer buying (DRM-free) games from sites where I know for certain that none of their games have DRM. That means GOG and DotEmu, I guess. Impulse purchases and playing inspector Clouseau don't mix too well, like trying to figure out what the lack of any mention on "3rd party DRM" in certain sites' items really mean in practise (did they just forget to mention it, did it still have some in-house DRM, etc.), or for that matter what it means in practise that the DRM is said to be "SecuROM" or "Tages". One time activation on installation, installation caps, always online requirements? What?
That's why I normally couldn't care less for "GamersGate and Desure have DRM-free titles too!". Sure they do, and some Ubisoft games are DRM-free as well.
timppu: I could easily afford to throw 5€ out of the window every morning, but I don't do that out of principle.
SimonG: Are you making fun of my daily Starbucks "coffee" fix ;-P
What, they don't sometimes give you your coffee? :-O
I don't think we have Starbucks in here, but I recall when I went to one abroad and also purchased their WiFi ticket in order to get some work done on my laptop, their WLAN was pretty much unusable. The data trickled down like 1kB/s and it lost the connection all the time, so in the end I couldn't even read my work email during the two hours I spent there.
Even though I didn't pay much for it, I felt ripped off. I certainly wouldn't have paid for the WiFi ticket if I had known, and I didn't go to that place again.