Though I remembered that my MacBook came with a pack of games and OmniOutliner, and my wife's with Quicken.
Sure, it's not really bloatware and more like freebies, but it's good to remember that Macs don't come perfectly clean either and that Apple gets paid a little too.
I've purchased probably close to a dozen various Apple machines (MacMini's, MacBookPro 17, MacBook, MacBookPro 15, MacBook Air) in the last ~4 years and have never had anything come on them besides OS X, iLife, iWork (which I don't consider bloatware, plus they're easy to remove if you want).
Directly from Apple both times, ~6 months apart from each other. Note that this extra software was pre-installed and on the Mac OS install DVD, not coming as a separate box/DVD. It would have been very easy to miss it and, again, I don't consider this bloatware.
I imagine the iWork you mention was the trial version of it, right? Not bloatware to me either since you're not bothered to upgrade like you might be with pop-ups for anti-viruses on a Windows PC.
I think the iWork install was a full copy, I don't remember for sure, since I use iWork (and not MS Office anymore) if it wasn't a full license I would have bought a license almost immediately anyway.
I also forgot, FWIW, I bought an iMac for the kitchen/wife's home computer, and that didn't come with any crapware either.
When was this? I purchased an iBook in like 2000, a Macbook in 2006, an iMac in 2008, a MBA in 2009 and I've never had Quicken or OmniOutliner. The iBook came with a few games, but it wasn't what I'd consider bloatware at all.
Though I remembered that my MacBook came with a pack of games and OmniOutliner, and my wife's with Quicken.
Sure, it's not really bloatware and more like freebies, but it's good to remember that Macs don't come perfectly clean either and that Apple gets paid a little too.