The second installment, Shadows Over Bögenhafen, was written by Phil Gallagher, Jim Bambra, and Graeme Davis, with cover art and illustrations by Martin McKenna and Ian Miller, and cartography by Charles Elliot.
The only issue Edwards had as "Due to the huge amount of information provided, some of the details are hard to locate easily.
"[8] In the September 1987 issue of White Dwarf, Phil Gallagher noted the "variety of locations throughout the Reikland, with numerous sub-plots and motivations for the GM to use as prods when necessary."
"[3] In Issue 3 of the Finnish magazine Sininen Lohikäärme, Harri Heinonen thought that this supplement was "A detective adventure at its purest.
"[9] In Issue 8 of the British games magazine The Games Machine, John Woods was conflicted by this supplement, commenting that it was "easy to follow, the Empire background апd Bogenhafen descriptions (including a large pull-out map) could be useful for tuning your own adventures as well as this one, but the linearity of plot makes life very difficult for a referee whose players try to tackle problems in unusual ways and come up with angles the designers haven't thought of.
"[12] In Issue 37 of the French games magazine Casus Belli (April 1987), Jean Balczesak reviewed the first two parts of The Enemy Within Campaign (The Enemy Within and Shadows over Bögenhafen) and was impressed with both of them, writing, "If the upcoming publications for Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay are of a similar quality to these first two releases, we don't see what could prevent this game from achieving the success it deserves!